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(Un)healthy Relationships: African Labourers, Profits and Health Services in Angola’s Colonial-Era Diamond Mines, 1917–75

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2013

Jorge Varanda
Affiliation:
Departamento da Ciencias da Vida, Universidade de Coimbra, Rua Arco da Traição, 3000-056 Coimbra, Portugal
Todd Cleveland*
Affiliation:
2431 13th Street, Moline, IL 61265, USA
*
* Email address for correspondence: todd.c.cleveland@gmail.com
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Abstract

The Companhia de Diamantes de Angola, or Diamang, mined for diamonds in colonial Angola from 1917 until independence in 1975. The enterprise’s Health Services Division (SSD) was responsible for supplying mine managers with an African labour force comprised of healthy, and therefore productive, employees. In practice, though, this otherwise ‘healthy’ system did not always work. While SSD personnel attempted to fulfil their charge by implementing a series of screening measures, production targets and a scarcely-populated regional labour pool regularly prompted senior officials to compel the SSD to clear recruits who were otherwise unfit for mine service. Drawing upon interviews with former SSD staff and African labourers, as well as company and colonial archival sources, this article focuses on the interplay over time between the SSD, the company’s production demands and these labourers.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © the Author(s) 2014. Published by Cambridge University Press. 
Figure 0

Figure 1: Map of Angola, including Diamang’s concessionary area (the extensive, lightly shaded area) and the company’s exclusive labour procurement and operational area (the smaller, dark-shaded area). Dundo, the company’s headquarters can be seen in the upper right corner of the latter area. Source: Diamang. Breve Noticia sobre a sua actividade em Angola. Lisboa: Tip. Silvas, Lda, 1963.

Figure 1

Table 1: Pignet index values and corresponding descriptions. Source: MAUC — Folder 86 38o Diamang, Mão d’ Obra de December 1, 1938 to March 31, 1939.

Figure 2

Figure 2: Pignet levels of African recruits.43

Figure 3

Table 2: 1970 Mão de Obra: All accidents per year. at times, fatalities (Table 2).58 at times, fatalities (Table 2).58 Source: MAUC: Folder Maõ de Obra, 1970.