This thesis focuses on child labour in producing bountiful supply of cocoa in the cocoa-producing area of Gomoa Ofaso in the Winneba District from 1874 when there was labour shortage up to 1940... Show moreThis thesis focuses on child labour in producing bountiful supply of cocoa in the cocoa-producing area of Gomoa Ofaso in the Winneba District from 1874 when there was labour shortage up to 1940 when colonial Ghana was the principal producer of cocoa globally. This thesis has been divided into six chapters. This thesis, by the use of qualitative research methodology, demonstrated that market forces after the abolition of domestic slavery in 1874 together with the introduction and export of cocoa intensified the use of child labour in this District due to the shortage of labour. The research of child labour in cocoa production in the colonial period is important because it has often been categorised as an example of the worst forms of child labour, yet it has not been adequately studied. This thesis contributes to the discourse on child labour in the colonial period and how the colonial labour problem was dealt with in cocoa production. Show less
This article discusses slavery and the lives of enslaved people in Jaffna, northern Sri Lanka, under Dutch and British rule. It argues that by sanctioning and tapping into a perceived local... Show moreThis article discusses slavery and the lives of enslaved people in Jaffna, northern Sri Lanka, under Dutch and British rule. It argues that by sanctioning and tapping into a perceived local practice of slavery and legally constituting slaves, Dutch colonial rulers further strengthened the power of the dominant caste Vellalar over their subordinates. This was done through processes of registration, legal codification, and litigation. For some enslaved people, however, bureaucratization provided grounds for negotiation and resistance, as well as the potential to take control over their individual lives. British rule that took over areas controlled by the Dutch East India Company or Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie—first in the guise of the East India Company (1796–1802), then under the Crown (1802–1948)—introduced a number of measures, acts, and incentives to dismantle slavery as it was practiced on the island. This article draws from Dutch and early British period petitions, court records, commission reports, and slave registers to interrogate the discourse of freedom that permeated the British abolition of slavery from 1806 to 1844 and suggests that in Jaffna after abolition there remained bondage in freedom. Show less