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The “New Labour Policy” in Nazi Colonial Planning for Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 October 2004

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Abstract

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The National Socialist planning for a recolonization of Africa was based on a new social and labour policy and focused chiefly on the “labour question”. In designing their schemes, planners strove to mobilize wage labour and circumvent the much-feared “proletarianization” of the workers. The key problem in exploiting the African colonies had two main aspects: a shortage of manpower and migrant labour. Therefore, planners designed complex systems of organized, state-controlled labour recruitment, and formulated rules for labour contracts and compensation. An expanded labour administration was to ensure that the “deployment of labour” ran smoothly and that workers were registered, evaluated, and supervised. Furthermore, “white labour guardians” were to be assigned the responsibility of overseeing the social wellbeing of the African workers. As was evident not only in Germany but in the colonial powers, France and Great Britain, as well, these concepts all fit into the general trend of the times, a trend characterized by the application of scientific methods in solving social issues, by the increased emphasis on state intervention, and by the introduction of sociopolitical measures. Nazi planning was based on Germany's prewar politics but also reflected the changes occurring in German work life after 1933.

Type
ARTICLE
Copyright
© 2004 Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis

Footnotes

This essay is based on my published Bremen Ph.D. dissertation, “Weiße Arbeitsführer” im “Kolonialen Ergängzungsraum”. Afrika als Ziel sozial- und wirtschaftpolitischer Planungen in der NS-Zeit (Münster, 2002).