Socialism,Economic Development and Planning in Mali, 1960–1968 |
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Authors: | Guy Martin |
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Institution: | Lecturer in Political Science, University of Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland, Gaborone, Botswana. |
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Abstract: | This article looks at practices of pilferage and bribery among African migrant dock workers in Durban in the 1950s. Many of Durban's dockers regularly engaged in small-scale theft, usually food for personal consumption, but sometimes they also got their hands on bigger and more expensive items or sold the pilfered goods. Many also relied on their social networks to find jobs and did not shy away from bribing izinduna to make sure that they were hired on ships that contained the right goods. Such crimes, which were often not recognised as such by the workers, have often been seen as forms of primitive and individual resistance to proletarianisation. This article, however, argues that these were not just reactive and opportunistic acts, but part of a conscious strategy to combine dock labour with a small business, which allowed several workers to withdraw from the wage labour market altogether. |
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Keywords: | Durban port dock labour pilferage |
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