Of Vagrants and Volunteers During Liberia's Operation Production, 1963–1969

IF 0.7 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY AFRICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY Pub Date : 2018-12-01 DOI:10.1353/AEH.2018.0009
Cassandra Mark-Thiesen
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT:A number of recent studies have highlighted how states across the African continent continued to revert to repressive labor practices for the sake of food production, cash-cropping, territorial expansion and infrastructural development during the late colonial and postcolonial period. Yet, the focus has mostly been on colonial continuities. This article investigates coercive labor as a deliberate but concealed part of a national rally for increased agricultural productivity in Liberia of the 1960s. Operation Production, which began in 1963, demanded the total participation of all of the populace and all sectors of the economy, yet, it especially targeted the farming population. The unfolding of the scheme was met with a vivacious response in both rural and urban society; amongst the rich and poor. However, different socioeconomic groups were requested to carry different burdens in the process. This exuberant reception, combined with the anchoring of the "modern" developmentalist narrative of integration and modernization in a way that spoke to many Liberians, was particularly useful for cloaking the systematic enforcement of repressive labor laws in the rural interior. Mechanisms such as new vagrancy legislation and the largely groundless declaration of a state of emergency further aided the expansion of compulsory agriculture at the hands of rural authorities.
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1963–1969年利比里亚生产行动期间的流浪者和志愿者
摘要:最近的一些研究强调了在殖民后期和后殖民时期,非洲大陆各国如何为了粮食生产、经济种植、领土扩张和基础设施发展而继续恢复压制性的劳工做法。然而,焦点大多集中在殖民地的持续性上。本文调查了20世纪60年代利比里亚为提高农业生产力而举行的全国集会中蓄意但隐蔽的强迫劳动。生产行动始于1963年,要求所有民众和所有经济部门的全面参与,但它特别针对农业人口。该计划的实施在农村和城市社会都得到了热烈的反响;在富人和穷人中间。然而,不同的社会经济群体被要求在这一过程中承担不同的负担。这种热烈的欢迎,加上以一种对许多利比里亚人来说很有说服力的方式锚定了融合和现代化的“现代”发展主义叙事,对于掩盖内陆农村地区压制性劳动法的系统执行尤其有用。新的流浪立法和基本上毫无根据地宣布紧急状态等机制进一步有助于扩大农村当局手中的义务农业。
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