Labor Migration and Commodity Production in Africa: Global Entanglements

Labor Migration and Commodity Production in Africa: Global Entanglements

Organizer
Esboços: Histories in Global Contexts
ZIP
-
Location
-
Country
Brazil
Takes place
Digital
From - Until
01.01.2024 - 10.02.2024
By
Connections Redaktion, Leipzig Research Centre Global Dynamics, Universität Leipzig

This Special Issue intends to bring together studies on labor migration that focus on the agency of labor migrants in transforming connections between Africa and elsewhere. Its objective is to pinpoint how the making of these connections often hinged on the circulation of men and women engaged in commodity production/extraction for long-distance trading at a global scale.

Labor Migration and Commodity Production in Africa: Global Entanglements

Human mobility across cultural, political, and social boundaries is nothing new in African History. As people moved beyond their immediate horizons for a variety of reasons, they (un)consciously spurred changes since immemorial times. However, the increasing interconnectedness of African societies with the development of global markets over the past six centuries brought about wide-ranging consequences, gapping inequalities not least among them (GREEN, 2019). The creation of labor markets where workforce ("free" or otherwise) could be procured over long distances to cater for commodity production has been studied for decades. Yet as Samir Amin once put it, many perspectives on labor migration fail to be more than tautologies that explain the phenomena of labor migration by merely indicating the existence of people who are likely to migrate (AMIN, 1995). Further, many scholarly investigations on labor migration in Africa have been deadlocked in describing cases to fit into a typological "spectrum" of coerced labor ranging from chattel slavery to "free" contract labor (MARTINO, 2022).

This Special Issue intends to bring together studies on labor migration that focus on the agency of labor migrants in transforming connections between Africa and elsewhere. Its objective is to pinpoint how the making of these connections often hinged on the circulation of men and women engaged in commodity production/extraction for long-distance trading at a global scale. We thus seek to highlight how labor migrancy in Africa is a fundamental aspect in understanding the increasing interconnectedness of the world through commodity markets such as cotton, hard fibers, coffee, cocoa, palm oil, raw minerals, among many others. Contributions based on written and oral sources collected from African archives are especially welcome.

Papers must conform to ESBOCOS Guidelines.

References:
AMIN, Samir. 1995. “Migrations in Contemporary Africa: A Retrospective View”. In: BAKER, Jonathan; AINA, Tade Akin (Eds.) The Migration Experience in Africa. Uppsala: Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, p. 29-40.
GREEN, Toby. A Fistful of Shells: West Africa from the rise of the slave trade to the age of Revolutions. London: Penguin Books, 2019.
MARTINO, Enrique. Touts: Recruiting Indentured Labor in the Gulf of Guinea. Oldenbourg: De Gruyter, 2022

Authors are invited to submit original articles that conforms to ESBOCOS Guidelines, and templates.

Guest Editors:
Kerem Duymus was born in Turkey and received his undergraduate education in the department of Sociology at the Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University in Istanbul. He completed his master's degree in the Global History program at the University of Bayreuth, Germany, with a master thesis on the political-economy of the Sokoto Caliphate. He is currently a PhD candidate at the Africa Institute of the University of Leipzig, within the research program of Global and Area Studies Graduate School. His main research interest is the history of governance and political-economy in West Africa during the 19th century.
Felipe Barradas Correia Castro Bastos is a Brazilian historian. He completed his MA (2018) and PhD (2022) at the Social History of Africa program in the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP), researching topics on the making of anticolonial movements and labor migration movements between Mozambique and Tanzania, particularly the formation of the sisal industry in contemporary East Africa (1880-1960). He is currently an assistant professor in Global History at UNICENTRO, Paraná, Brazil.

Contact Information
Jo Klanovicz, Editor Esboços - Histórias em Contextos Globais
https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/esbocos

Contact (announcement)

esbocos@contato.ufsc.br

https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/esbocos
Editors Information
Published on
12.01.2024
Classification
Temporal Classification
Regional Classification
Subject - Topic
Additional Informations
Country Event
Language(s) of event
English
Language of announcement