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Author Breman, Jan, author.

Title Mobilizing labour for the global coffee market : profits from an unfree work regime in colonial Java / Jan Breman.

Publication Info. Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, [2015]
©2015

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Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe JSTOR Open Ebooks  Electronic Book    ---  Available
Description 1 online resource (404 pages, viii pages of plates) : color illustrations, color maps, color portraits
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
data file
Series Social histories of work in Asia
Social histories of work in Asia.
Summary Coffee has been grown on Java for the commercial market since the early eighteenth century, when the Dutch East India Company began buying from peasant producers in the Priangan highlands. What began as a commercial transaction, however, soon became a system of compulsory production. This book shows how the Dutch East India Company mobilised land and labour, why they turned to force cultivation, and what effects the brutal system they installed had on the economy and society.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 381-401) and index.
Contents Machine generated contents note: I. The company as a territorial power -- Intrusion into the hinterland -- Retreat of princely authority -- Territorial demarcation and hierarchical structuring -- The Priangan highlands as a frontier -- Clearing the land for cultivation -- The composite peasant household -- Higher and lower-ranking chiefs -- Rendering servitude -- Peasants and their lords in the early-colonial era -- II. The introduction of forced cultivation -- A colonial mode of production -- From free trade to forced delivery -- The start of coffee cultivation -- Increasing the tribute -- Coercion and desertion -- Indigenous management -- Under the Company's control -- Tardy population growth -- Tackling `cultivation delinquency' -- III. From trading company to state enterprise -- Clashing interests -- Failing management -- After the fall of the VOC -- A conservative reformer -- Strengthening the government apparatus -- Social restructuring -- Stepping up corvee services.
Note continued: Sealing off the Priangan -- The land rent system -- IV. Government regulated exploitation versus private agribusiness -- Discovery of the village system -- Land sale -- In search of a new policy -- The deregulation of coffee cultivation, except in the Priangan -- Patching up leakage and other irregularities -- Increasing leverage for private estates -- The downfall of the free enterprise lobby -- The policy dispute continues -- Political turmoil at home -- V. Unfree labour as a condition for progress -- Shifting coffee cultivation to gardens -- Mobilizing labour -- Expansion of forced labour -- Beyond the reach of the government -- The obligation to perform coolie labour and the need for tight surveillance -- In search of the hidden labour reserve -- Indispensability of the chiefs, for the time being -- The Priangan variant as a `colonial constant' -- Spreading benevolence at home and on Java -- VI. The coffee regime under the cultivation system.
Note continued: Anew surge in the colonial tribute -- Coffee and more -- More and more coffee -- Approaching the workfloor -- The happiness of the innocent -- Stagnation -- Crisis -- Non-compliance -- VII. Winding up the Priangan system of governance -- `A system that is arbitrary, repressive and secretive' -- Taxation, resistance and retribution -- Cultivating coffee and growing food -- The welfare of the people -- Good governance -- From protectors to exploiters -- The reform operation -- Release from servitude -- VIII. Eclipse of the coffee regime from the Sunda highlands -- The dilemmas of political expediency -- A turn for the better? -- Impact of the reforms on the peasantry -- Establishment of the village system -- Shifting the onus of servitude -- The contours of a new economic policy -- The agrarian underclasses.
Note Print version record.
Access Open Access EbpS
Subject Forced labor -- Indonesia -- Java -- History.
Coffee industry -- Indonesia -- Java -- History.
Travail forcé -- Indonésie -- Java -- Histoire.
Café -- Commerce -- Indonésie -- Java -- Histoire.
HISTORY -- Asia -- General.
HISTORY -- General.
Coffee industry
Forced labor
Indonesia -- Java https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJyCHqWPF3pdtjwvKRw6Kd
Genre/Form History
Added Title Profits from an unfree work regime in colonial Java
Other Form: Print version: Breman, Jan. Mobilizing labour for the global coffee market 9789089648594 (OCoLC)906678652
ISBN 9789048527144 (electronic bk.)
9048527147 (electronic bk.)
9789089648594
9089648593
Standard No. AU@ 000057033009
AU@ 000058381072
DEBSZ 475045173
DEBSZ 493171029
GBVCP 847701816
GBVCP 865785856
GBVCP 869966839

 
    
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