04758nam 2200613 450 991079832400332120230808193449.090-04-31638-810.1163/9789004316386(CKB)3710000000720850(SSID)ssj0001672757(PQKBManifestationID)16432358(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001672757(PQKBWorkID)14968047(PQKB)10892184(PQKBManifestationID)16471180(PQKB)25010997(MiAaPQ)EBC4547318(OCoLC)938394181(nllekb)BRILL9789004316386(EXLCZ)99371000000072085020160711h20162016 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrOn coerced labor work and compulsion after chattel slavery /edited by Marcel van der Linden, Magaly Rodriguez GarciaLeiden, Netherlands ;Boston, [Massachusetts] :Brill,2016.©20161 online resource (387 pages) illustrations, tables, mapsStudies in Global Social History,1572-4107 ;Volume 25Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph90-04-31637-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Preliminary Material /Marcel van der Linden and Magaly Rodríguez García --Introduction /Marcel van der Linden and Magaly Rodríguez García --On the Legal Boundaries of Coerced Labor /Magaly Rodríguez García --Modern Slavery: The Legal Tug-of-war between Globalization and Fragmentation /Nicole Siller --Forced Labor and Institutional Change in Contemporary India /Christine Molfenter --Forced Labor in Colonial Penal Institutions across the Spanish, U.S., British, French Atlantic, 1860s–1920s /Kelvin Santiago-Valles --Convict Labor in the Southern Borderlands of Latin America (ca. 1750s–1910s): Comparative Perspectives /Christian G. De Vito --‘A military necessity which must be pressed’: The U.S. Army and Forced Road Labor in the Early American Colonial Philippines /Justin F. Jackson --Foreign Forced Labor at Mitsubishi’s Nagasaki and Hiroshima Shipyards: Big Business, Militarized Government, and the Absence of Shipbuilding Workers’ Rights in World War II Japan /David Palmer --Coerced Coffee Cultivation and Rural Agency: The Plantation-Economy of the Kivu (1918–1940) /Sven Van Melkebeke --“As much in bondage as they was before”: Unfree Labor during the New Deal (1935–1952) /Nicola Pizzolato --State-Sanctioned Coercion and Agricultural Contract Labor: Jamaican and Mexican Workers in Canada and the United States, 1909–2014 /Luis F.B. Plascencia --“Modern Slave Labor” in Brazil at the Intersection of Production, Migration and Resistance Networks /Lisa Carstensen --Dissecting Coerced Labor /Marcel van der Linden --Bibliography /Marcel van der Linden and Magaly Rodríguez García --Index /Marcel van der Linden and Magaly Rodríguez García.On Coerced Labor focuses on those forms of labor relations that have been overshadowed by the “extreme” categories (wage labor and chattel slavery) in the historiography. It covers types of work lying between what the law defines as “free labor” and “slavery.” The frame of reference is the observation that although chattel slavery has largely been abolished in the course of the past two centuries, other forms of coerced labor have persisted in most parts of the world. While most nations have increasingly condemned the continued existence of slavery and the slave trade, they have tolerated labor relationships that involve violent control, economic exploitation through the appropriation of labor power, restriction of workers’ freedom of movement, and fraudulent debt obligations. Contributors are: Lisa Carstensen, Christian G. De Vito, Justin F. Jackson, Christine Molfenter, David Palmer, Nicola Pizzolato, Luis F.B. Plascencia, Magaly Rodríguez García, Kelvin Santiago-Valles, Nicole J. Siller, Marcel van der Linden, Sven Van Melkebeke.Studies in global social history ;Volume 25.Forced laborHistorySlave laborHistoryLaborHistoryForced laborHistory.Slave laborHistory.LaborHistory.331.11/73Linden Marcel van der1952-Rodriguez Garcia Magaly1973-MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910798324003321On coerced labor3840176UNINA