Women and Work in Zimbabwe, C.1800–2000

IF 0.7 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY AFRICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY Pub Date : 2022-06-02 DOI:10.1353/aeh.2022.0004
P. Rory
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Abstract

ABSTRACT:This paper looks at the working lives of women in Zimbabwe and how these have shifted and changed over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. To do so, official labor records, census and labor surveys are augmented with qualitative data about the labor relations women performed outside of the formal economy. Key here will be exploring female contributions to the informal labor economy, subsistence or peasant agriculture, and their reproductive and household labor. In order to fully assess women's participation in the economy of the region, attention will also be paid to the migrant labor system in southern Africa and how women have responded to this, participated in it, and pursued their own agency within this system. The paper adopts wider conceptual approaches, including a broader definition of labor and using the methodology and the taxonomy of labor relations developed at the International Institute of Social History for the study of shifts and continuities in labor and labor relations across time and space at a global scale. The paper makes the argument that social structure and gender relations present in African societies during the late 1800s informed responses to colonialism, not necessarily the other way around. These relations continued to influenced how women interacted with the wage labor economy and informal economy after independence and into the twenty-first century.
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津巴布韦的妇女和工作,约1800 - 2000年
摘要:本文着眼于津巴布韦妇女的工作生活,以及这些生活在19世纪和20世纪是如何发生变化的。为此,官方劳工记录、人口普查和劳工调查都增加了关于女性在正规经济之外从事劳动关系的定性数据。这里的重点将是探索女性对非正规劳动经济、自给农业或农民农业的贡献,以及她们的生殖和家庭劳动。为了充分评估妇女在该区域经济中的参与情况,还将关注南部非洲的移民劳工制度,以及妇女如何对此作出反应、参与其中,并在该制度中寻求自己的代理权。该论文采用了更广泛的概念方法,包括对劳动的更广泛定义,并使用国际社会历史研究所开发的劳动关系方法和分类法,在全球范围内研究跨时间和空间的劳动和劳动关系的转变和连续性。该论文认为,19世纪末非洲社会中存在的社会结构和性别关系为对殖民主义的反应提供了信息,而不一定相反。这些关系继续影响着妇女在独立后和二十一世纪如何与有薪劳动经济和非正规经济互动。
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