Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.ctu.edu.vn/jspui/handle/123456789/70832
Title: The Regulation, division, and multiplication of emigrant labor: The Border between land and sea in colonial India, 1834-1922
Authors: Koya, Riyad Sadiq
Keywords: Borders
Indentured labor
Asiatic exclusion
Mobility
labor migration
Emigration
Immigration
Oceanic history,
Indian nationalism
British Empire
Issue Date: 2021
Series/Report no.: Journay of World History;Vol.32, No.01 .- P.45-63
Abstract: In this article, I argue the significance of the border between land and sea for the regulation of labor migration. I identify an early sense of this border in the East India Company’s efforts to prohibit the trafficking of slaves overseas by foreign powers. I focus on a shift in the imaginary of the border with the advent of the indentured labor system. New permits, passes, and registration procedures were implemented to materialize the voluntariness of emigration for indentured laborers. Through an examination of Indian emigration legislation, I trace the continuous recalibration of the border through the differential inclusion of new occupational groups and labor migration streams under the umbrella of state regulation. I reevaluate the campaign for the abolition of indentured labor as a further recalibration of the border between land and sea that distinguished discrete rights of mobility for laboring subjects divided and multiplied by the category of skill.
URI: https://dspace.ctu.edu.vn/jspui/handle/123456789/70832
ISSN: 1045-6007
Appears in Collections:Journal of World history

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