La producción de la precariedad: industrialización y desigualdad racial en el Zimbabue colonial
Publication date
2022-07-15
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Abstract
During the mid-twentieth century, the colony of Southern Rhodesia (today Zimbabwe) underwent a rapid process of industrial development, leading tens of thousands of black African men to leave overcrowded rural Reserves in search of better economic prospects in bur-geoning industrial cities. Cities in Southern Rhodesia promised higher wages relative to rural areas, but many urban black labourers found themselves in precarious economic positions. Few black industrial workers earned wages sufficient to support an urban family; meanwhile, white industrial workers secured wage rates ten times higher, afforded by colonial institutions geared primarily toward serving the needs of white European settlers. This study zooms in on the foun-dations and consequences of racial inequality in industrializing Southern Rhodesia and also considers the settler colony in comparative perspective relative to other sub-Saharan African colonies – both settler and non-settler – to draw attention to the interplay between economic development, institutions, and inequality in a colonial context.
Keywords
colonialism, industrialization, racial inequality, urbanization, History and Philosophy of Science, SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth, SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities
Citation
Frederick, K 2022, 'La producción de la precariedad : industrialización y desigualdad racial en el Zimbabue colonial', Revista de Historia Industrial, vol. 31, no. 85, pp. 51-86. https://doi.org/10.1344/rhiihr.38047