Fr. 96.00

Dominican Sugar Plantations - Production and Foreign Labor Integration

English · Hardback

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Description

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Primarily focusing on the organization of production and labor use practices in the Caribbean's second largest sugar industry, this work's historical, macroeconomic, political, and sociocultural components depict the reality of today's Dominican sugar economy. The Dominican Republic has been radically altered by its internationally oriented sugar economy--its society and national culture transformed and its political, legal, and economic structures modified. This book describes the progressive replacement of national labor in the sugar industry by foreign workers. Comparing the three distinct sugar corporations, it concludes that all three exploited foreign labor. The study refutes modern slavery charges through social science theory and extensive field research. Depicting living and working conditions in the fields, it concludes that slavery charges are the result of superficial analyses of symbols. More in-depth analyses display one of the most extreme forms of superexploitation in the twentieth century.

Addressing present-day labor utilization strategies in the Dominican Republic sugar plantation system, Martin Murphy focuses on three areas: the logic of production, foreign labor integration, and a comparative analysis of three corporations. His first two chapters provide an overview of the historic and contemporary Dominican sugar industry. Historical patterns of labor recruitment and use are then presented in Chapter 3. Chapter 4 describes the basic logic of production and use of various types of labor for the plantations of the 1980s. Murphy's last four chapters address the question of heavy reliance on Haitian labor: Chapter 5 provides a history of Haitian migration; Chapter 6 discusses factors of expulsion and attraction which condition present-day Haitian migration to Dominican fields; Chapters 7 and 8 conclude with questions of Haitian ethnicity and its relationship to production organization.

List of contents










Preface
Introduction
Overview of the Historical and Contemporary Dominican Sugar Industry
Historical National and International Labor
The Modern Organization of Production and Labor
Modern Haitian Migration to the Dominican Sugar Industry
Factors of Expulsion and Attraction in Modern Haitian Migration to the Dominican Sugar Industry
Anti-Haitian Prejudice: Origins and Myths
Ethnic Distinctions, Real or Imagined?
Bibliography
Index


About the author

MARTIN F. MURPHY is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Departmental Fellow of the Helen Kellogg Institute for International Studies at the University of Notre Dame. He was also an Assistant Director of the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Florida and a Special Professor at the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo (UASD). He lived in the Dominican Republic for five years and has authored three books and many articles on various aspects of Dominican and Haitian society and culture.

Product details

Authors Martin Murphy, Martin F. Murphy
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Age Recommendation ages 7 to 17
Product format Hardback
Released 30.08.1991
 
EAN 9780275931131
ISBN 978-0-275-93113-1
No. of pages 200
Weight 482 g
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

Labour / income economics, Labour Economics, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Labor / General, Politics, Law, and Government: Comparative Politics

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