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Oceanic Mobility and the Empire of the Pass System

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 March 2023

Bhavani Raman*
Affiliation:
University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
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Abstract

From the age of empires to the apartheid regime in South Africa, pass laws have defined the scope of the mobility of subjects by relying on a paper document, the pass. This essay focusses on the pass document to understand the governance of mobility in the Indian ocean. In doing so, it shows how the pass document in its various forms through many centuries in fact, illuminates a form of inter-legal governance through which racialized life came to be constituted via convention and statute.

Type
Original Article
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Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Society for Legal History

The paperwork of oceanic mobility provides a compelling vantage point from which to take the measure of imperial laws that have defined the scope of the mobility of subjects. Paperwork has a double-edged relationship to law and empire. The arrangements that distribute and co-relate information inscribed on documents are the site of imperial fashioning because documents carry the procedures and signs of authority. But paperwork also modifies and remakes legal meaning or the status that law endows on persons. As part of this special issue on paperwork empires, my article focuses on the intersecting but different trajectories of a small but powerful document, the travel permit or pass conventionally used to govern the mobility of persons and things across the seas.

In recent years, the archive of trade and transregional mobility across the Indian Ocean has been important to the oceanic turn in legal history.Footnote 1 From the early modern era on, documents were intrinsic to free and forced mobility across the Indian Ocean.Footnote 2 In this context, the permit or the pass transected two types of mobility. Strangers were offered safe passage by potentates, kings, or imperial agents in the form of a written document. The pass embodied the conventions of safe passage. At the same time, the pass also facilitated the forced movement of slaves in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. In the nineteenth century, after human trafficking was no longer legal, the pass remained essential to the Indian Ocean's plantation-industrial complex. It now facilitated the forced mobility of convict workers and eventually of indentured workers in the form of a permit document. In this manner, the pass was a medium that not only cut across two distinct types of legal mobility, one protected and the other policed, but also cut across two eras bifurcated by the abolition of slavery in law.

One reason why the pass was an efficacious tool for managing mobility was that it was a document that did not stand alone. It was embedded in arrangements of paperwork. These arrangements were closely connected to the material qualities of documents. Signatures, indexes, registers, and ways to arrange and corelate them made up the arrangements of paperwork across imperial jurisdictions, languages, and legal conventions. That is, paperwork's empire is inter-legal. As we will see the pass makes visible racialised life and spaces constituted between bodies of law and between empires.

Boaventura de Sousa Santos defined inter-legality as the phenomenological counterpart to legal pluralism.Footnote 3 Legal pluralism or the acknowledgement that multiple legal systems coexist within the same political space or social field has successfully allowed legal scholars to critique a monist image of law beholden to a state-centered sovereign authority. Instead, scholars of legal pluralism have pointed to myriad normative orders and authorities that constitute legality and legal meaning. Santos, however, pushes beyond conventional ideas of legal pluralism. Rather than the coexistence of different legal orders in one polity or different polities within a shared language of law, Santos is interested in the relations between law and spatiality. For Santos, inter-legal spaces are “non-synchronic and thus result in uneven and unstable mixings of legal codes (codes in a semiotic sense).”Footnote 4

Of the pass's many histories, the history of how populations were nationalized synchronically and tethered to territory through the documentation of individual identity is especially well known.Footnote 5 Bringing Santos's phenomenological analysis of inter-legality to bear on the pass illuminates another history. Considering the pass, a material object, as the phenomenological counterpart of legal pluralism, shows it to be amenable to interpretation by competing and multiple states, legal traditions, and bodies of law, thereby illuminating the non-synchronic intersection of state and non-state law. In this sense, the document outlines the historical crafting of a genre of statute—pass laws—that have defined the scope of mobility from the age of empires to postwar apartheid regimes.

As we will see, the early history of the pass took different trajectories. It facilitated the mobility of strangers protected by safe passage conventions, exerted the police authority of masters over slaves, and constrained the mobility of convicts and indentured workers in the era that followed the abolition of slavery. Taken together, these versions of the pass show how a distinct realm of racialized life was made by the paperwork of mobility at the intersection of state and non-state law through convention and statute.Footnote 6 This is why, rather than the ordering effect of law, the pass in fact clarifies how legality is fashioned in the shadow of documents.

Case law and treatises do not define the messy business of imperial jurisprudence, argue Lisa Ford and Lauren Benton, signaling a recent interest among legal historians in how imperial jurisdictional struggles shaped the history of international law.Footnote 7 One can further argue that not only was colonial modernity wrought from the coexistence of multiple legal orders but also, phenomenologically speaking, modern colonialism was experienced as an intense reliance on paperwork. In my book Document Raj, I used the archive of the British East India Company to show how states that evoke the majesty of law's sovereignty, are equally premised on social and bureaucratic practices that adhere to the materiality of writing. As British imperialism was crafted out of a patchwork of plural legal traditions, the East India Company selectively deployed paper as the via media of sovereignty and law, social dealings, and associative life. The liberal, John Stuart Mill, embodied this racialized “paper fever” when he declared that perfect records would compensate for what he believed to be the innate mendacity of the Company's non-European subjects; their incapacity for political deliberation in the style of the Roman statesman, Cicero; and, therefore, their inability to rule themselves.Footnote 8 Paper did not just execute law in the British Empire. Liberal proponents of the law and good government cultivated paperwork as a substitute for self-representation. Colonial subjects caught up in official paper-fever found themselves navigating the broken promise of law through the simultaneous possibility of paper's accountability and its punitive power.Footnote 9 Burning of records and government paper has been widely recorded in studies of agrarian rebellion in British India. The slave registry bills in the British Atlantic between 1813 and 1819 is also a key example. Cedric Robinson writes that the registry and its delayed implementation sparked anti-slavery rebellions in the British Caribbean. Documents filtered legal meanings; they also rendered European law open to alternative legal interpretation.Footnote 10

One severe entailment of colonial paperwork was that the burden of paper bore more heavily on those oppressed by race, caste and other social norms. As a number of scholars of South Africa have shown, racialized subjectivity there was constituted by surveillance and mobility documents, and it was maintained in Israel by a permit regime.Footnote 11 At the same time, paper documents are innately contingent. Official paper document systems are vulnerable to duplication, as colonial Indian officials’ paranoia about forgery shows.Footnote 12 This double-edged legacy of colonial paperwork as a site of fashioning and rewriting of law and its punitive power motivates my interest in the pass.

A second reason for examining the travel pass is its specific function: controlling mobility through the management of information. John Guillory calls documents “information genres” to indicate how paper enable facts to acquire value by their transmission.Footnote 13 As situated objects, the document enables what is encoded by them to be abstracted as objective information. An index is an excellent example of an information genre. By the same token, what we take to be information has also been shaped by this material encoding. Lisa Gitelman notes that in part, information comes to us in small bits because the concept of information reifies the bounded and portable quality of paper.Footnote 14 The index again, is a good example. It compiles a series of bounded paper entries. Using these insights, I approach the pass as an information genre. The evolving history of the pass maps the history of racialized labor control and mobility onto the history of modern information systems.

Finally, the travel pass offers a compelling site for specifying the implications of the changing media arrangements of paper documents. Conventions of writing, signature, and the correlation of the pass to the register make up the media arrangements of the pass. Over a long historical arc, the authenticity of the pass pivoted from the primacy of the signature of the sovereign or the master of the household to its co-relatability to registers. Yet at no point did the pass's media or legal arrangements assume a centralized command structure. Instead, pass laws and regulations dispersed these media-legal arrangements of policing to the nodal agents of empire. Passes are reproducible; they can be copied, they circulate widely, and they can also serve as objects of political mobilization and counter-publicity that reveberated beyond a specific colony. The pass as such does not illuminate a “local” context to which empire adapted or its laws applied. Rather it serves as a concrete site for the fashioning of inter-legal spaces.

The Pass and the Conventions of Safe Passage

Pass documents in the Indian Ocean in the early modern era materialized a different legal convention than those which would animate later pass laws. The competition for passes in the early modern era correlates to a multi-polar legal world. Documentary conventions allowed for persons to navigate among polities, languages, and law.Footnote 15 Safe passage guarantees cut across competing legal traditions across state and non-state domains. This was especially true of the Indian Ocean, where a highly intermixed transregional and disaggregated legality, as Enseng Ho observes, informed conventions of mobility.Footnote 16

From the fifteenth century on, the pass became a travel document used for ships in the Indian Ocean. The shipping pass circulated between the high diplomatic conventions pertaining to strangers. The iconic Iberian cartaz contained a detailed description as well as the identity of the ship and its cargoes; it was issued for a fee or an annual tribute and it offered exclusive protection. But note the inter-legal tones of this pass. The term “cartaz,” is derived from the Arabic “Qirtas” (Qirṭās: paper). While the Portuguese effort intended to pivot Indian Ocean mobilities toward its cartaz, the protocols were based on prevailing conventions. Here, protection extended to strangers did not imply subjecthood, as an assignado signed in Goa in 1619 between the ambassador of the Raja of Cochin and the attorney of the Viceroy of the Estado de India indicates.Footnote 17

Cochin's ambassador, Levy Mudaliar, was a member of a prominent Castilian Jewish family of Levi, who were granted protection by the Raja of Cochin. Not only were Castilian Jews protected persons in Cochin, but they were also favored with high-ranking ambassadorial positions. The ambassador requested a pass in the name of the Raja for a pilgrim ship to travel to Mecca. In return, Cochin was not allowed to assert “protection” (i.e., monopoly) over anything defended or prohibited by the Portuguese detailed on other passes. Violations would nullify the pass, and penalties would apply as to a ship without paper.

The effort of the Portuguese to create an imperium by claiming an exclusive jurisdiction of the ocean elicited a critical response from individuals like the jurist of international law, Hugo Grotius. Grotius argued for a free sea. But the cartaz had already evoked the opprobrium of sixteenth-century Indian Ocean commentators, notably the Malabar scholar of Ponnani, Sheikh Zayn al-Dīn al-Malībārī. The sheikh objected to the fees charged by the Portuguese for their cartaz.Footnote 18 Zayn al- al-Dīn's criticism illustrates that safe passage conventions associated with the idea of ribāṭ, a concept of coastal guardianship rooted in Islamic vocabulary of war and peace were shifting. Safe passage was being monetized through the sale of passes.Footnote 19 Yet monetization did not preclude diplomatic negotiation. Offering safe passage to build spheres of influence became ubiquitous among Indian Ocean thalassocrats including those deemed “pirates.”Footnote 20 And indeed passes became central to war and peacemaking; for example, consider the case of the Golconda Sultan, who did not comply with the conditions imposed by the Portuguese with the pass he received in the 1580s.Footnote 21 Sanjay Subrahmanyam notes that the Portuguese fleet failed to seize the Sultan's ship. The Sultan proceeded to negotiate a better arrangement and simultaneously secured a safe passage guarantee from the Estado de India's rival, the Dutch East India Company (VOC). The competitive market in protections that cohered around the pass suggests that that document was a medium of inter-legality.Footnote 22 As far as the Golconda Sultan was concerned, by the conventions of safe passage, he was entitled to seek safe passage from multiple non-Muslim authorities without becoming their subject.

The monetization of the cartaz criticized by Zayn al- al-Dīn was not unique to the Portuguese. The Safavid and Mughal administrations of the k̲h̲āṣṣa (the royal household) collected, farmed out, and delegated road tolls, a traveler's protection tax called rāhdārī.Footnote 23 The dastak rāhdārī or parwāna-i-rāh-dārī (travel permit) obligated imperial officials to provide safe passage to the holder, even providing the holder with a guard.Footnote 24 Akin to an insignia, or the token of a protector's hand, the pass spatialized and visualized the authority of its issuer through its circulation.

It is unclear whether shipping passes were systematically registered at this time. The monetization of passes, however, remained crucial to treaty agreements establishing and negotiating trade monopolies right through the middle of the eighteenth century, as evidence from the Malabar coast suggests. In 1662, the Dutch concluded a treaty of friendship with the king of Travancore, by which they received the power to issue shipping passes to all sailing vessels entering Travancore.Footnote 25 When the Dutch captured nearby Cannanore (Kannur) in 1663 from the Portuguese, they agreed that the king of Kolathiri, North Malabar would receive half the revenue made from the sale of shipping passes.Footnote 26 During Travancore's pepper wars with Dutch in the mid-eighteenth century, which ultimately led to a drastic decline in Dutch imperial power in Malabar, the Travancore ruler Marthanda Varma offered a conditional peace. Among other things, the king offered to deliver 1000 candies of pepper if he received a Dutch pass to sell 200 candies of pepper at his pleasure.Footnote 27 After he won the defining 1753 war against the Dutch, the king of Travancore secured a treaty by which he supplied pepper at reduced rate to the Dutch and agreed to check its smuggling. In return, the Dutch protected the coast and issued him more passes so that Travancore could sell pepper directly to the Coromandel coast.Footnote 28

Evidence from Arakan on the eastern shores of the Bay of Bengal suggests shipping passes could be inter-medial because they were anchored in conventions of diplomacy and treaties; for example, consider a Persian farmān or decree issued by the Marauk U king of Arakan examined by Arash Khazeni.Footnote 29 The decree, dated 1728, is from Raja Chandrawizaya of Arakan, and invites the Armenian merchant Khwajeh George and his sibling, a Nakhoda or sea captain in Madras (Chennaipattinam) to trade in ivory and rice. Khazeni shows how safe passage conventions secured in writing were a way of imperial refashioning. Here the Arakanese kings of Mrauk U mobilized the Islamic-Persianate conventions of safe passage to invite Armenian merchants residing under British protection in Madras to trade with Arakan at the start of the monsoon. Khazeni notes that the Persian decree was a “golden ticket,” a permit that was notably transactive. Furthermore, while the permit indicates Persian as a mutual language of documents in the northern realms of the Indian Ocean in the eighteenth century, Khazemi established that the document was in fact a translation of the earliest dated Burmese palm-leaf manuscript in the British library. This manuscript is a single leaf permit issued to a foreigner, one “Khoja Joro Jin,” seeking permission to trade. What was shared between the two documents is a royal seal. Both bear the king's seal, inscribed in Pali, “Supreme Lord, Master of the Golden Palace,” blind-stamped on the palm leaf permit, stamped in black ink on the Persian letter, and in red wax on its cloth envelope and paper wrapper.Footnote 30 The Pali seal closely resembles that of the Mughals, most notably in the circular shape of the seal and in the pattern of lines and latitudes in the field. Furthermore, the decree's structure resembles the form and content of the Mughal commercial decree, which offered royal protection to foreign merchants and companies to conduct trade while simultaneously adapting to Arakanese form.Footnote 31

The Pali seal embodied the king's trust and endowed divine protection to its recipient across the medium of palm leaf and paper. The attributes of a certificate facilitated a multi-modal expression of safe passage that could speak simultaneously to Persian and Arakenese conventions. The pass, appears here, to quote Cornelia Vismann, as a documentary gesture of power,Footnote 32 but it does so because it was an object that served as a mutually recognizable entity among competing powers, languages, and law. In this way, the papers of safe passage—whether monetized shipping passes discussed in Malabar treaties or diplomatic decrees issued by Arakan kings—are the phenomenological counterpart of legal pluralism.

The empire of early modern paperwork then does not admit a stable legal order or sovereign-centered account of legality. The shipping pass was a medium that crafted a disaggregated inter-legality particularly suited to competitive trade networks of the transregional Indian Ocean trade. This is why the pass became such an important form for imperial fashioning whether by the Portuguese, the Dutch, or the Arakanese, or by the Rajas of the Malabar coasts. It is increasingly clear however, that the dense transactive and hybridized world of commerce and law of the Indian Ocean coexisted with and rested on the traffic in human beings. The Indian Ocean's slave trade flourished in spaces of disaggregated inter-legality. The question posed then, is whether and how passes facilitated the forced mobility of humans.

The Paperwork of Forced Mobility in the Indian Ocean

The centrality of the slave trade to Indian Ocean history from the seventeenth century onwards cannot be overemphasized. While a substantial traffic in humans was not known in the sixteenth century, the yearly capture and transport of several thousand persons across the Indian Ocean appears to have expanded at the turn of the seventeenth century, fueled by state and non-state entities. During this time the extensive trafficking of humans from the Indian subcontinent and eastern coast of Africa created population shifts with the depopulation of some regions and resettlement of others. In the eastern shores of the Bay of Bengal, the trafficking of humans facilitated the alliance of Portuguese and Arakanese raiders. From the 1620s, Portuguese captains unaffiliated with the Portuguese imperial bureaucracy led raiding on Bengal's deltaic coast.Footnote 33 The captives were sold to work in paddy cultivation and spice plantations, or to serve as soldiers and court scribes in South East Asia. The Arakanese rulers, the Mrauk U kings, leveraged slave procurement to fuel their political ambitions by 1630s. Indeed, rice and slaves were directly responsible for Arakanese expansion: it offset the shortage of domestic workers to clear its forests and supplied the spiralling export market in humans. Dutch forays into the area were also motivated by the capture of humans to work in the VOC's growing network of Indian Ocean trading posts, factories, and spice plantations. The demand for workers in Southeast Asian Dutch strongholds was especially high, following VOC colonization.

The high demand for labor was also one reason why the Arakanese and Dutch competed to exert a tight control on slaves through paperwork. This effort to regulate transhipment of trafficked humans and to a lesser degree marronage broadly served as contexts for the paperwork of forced mobility in the Indian Ocean. The Arakan court sought to reserve its exclusive right to retain skilled captives as slaves. Subrahmanyam writes of the Dutch receiving an Arakanese decree that bade them to buy only “new Bengalis” (nieuwe Bengaelders).Footnote 34 Once purchased, the slave and the seller had to be registered in Arakan. The VOC could not purchase skilled captives.

One difficulty with tracing the registration and passes pertaining to slaves is the nature of human trafficking in the Indian Ocean which was both highly competitive as I have just indicated, highly prevalent, but also embedded alongside highly diverse forms of forced labor. At one level, the enslaved formed a considerable proportion of coastal settlements. The starkest evidence comes from Dutch records. At least half of the population of the Dutch Fort at Cochin, Malabar, consisted of slaves.Footnote 35 A considerable number were forcibly sent from Cochin to Cape Town, Colombo, and Batavia. At the same time, most Dutch households in Cochin had between three and ten slaves.Footnote 36 As historians of Dutch slavery note, plantation and small-scale farming intermingled with one another, household slavery was dominant in urban settlements, and small groups of slaves worked together.Footnote 37 Furthermore, forms of forced labor were diverse. Localizing systems of bondage that immobilized people socially and spatially to their community, polity, ruler, or land—prevalent in caste-oppressive practices of labor extraction—existed alongside global or transregional trafficking in humans over long distances.Footnote 38 The intertwined relations of mobility and immobility is of course evidence of the continuous adaptation of institutions of coercion, whether under the sign of caste oppression and/or enslavement. But the diversity of forced labor regimes has also meant that the information about the forced mobility of humans is woven into rather than separated from data pertaining to more general population surveys such as those of households, ship lists, settlements, and absconders.

A second characteristic of Indian Ocean permits and passes concerning forced mobility seems to be that the documents were generally directed toward rendering the master accountable to regulation. This seems to be one response to the competition for labor. Linda Mbeki and Matthias van Rossum have noted that two sources, the records for the permission for forced transport (overgekomen brieven en papieren) and the registers of transactions (acten van transport) provide detailed information about Dutch-sponsored human trafficking.Footnote 39 The permissions for transport recorded details about owners and transporters and toponymic indexes of the enslaved. The permission by its very nature, does not elucidate the substantial illegal transportation of slaves, and overrepresents the high-ranking VOC officials and ship passengers who paid for the passage of their slaves. The second type of document, proofs of sell, are preserved for Dutch Cochin from 1753 onwards. It is striking that the registers of sell were created precisely when Dutch power began to decline in Malabar after the disastrous pepper wars with the Kingdom of Travancore. Registration monitored the transregional labor flows to Dutch colonial ports exactly when the VOC was losing a vital source of forced labor. Slave owners were required to register and notarize the transfer of ownership in the presence of a notary. The slaves bought by VOC subjects were moved overseas to Cape Town via Ceylon and Batavia.Footnote 40

The permits and registers discussed in the scholarship on Dutch Indian Ocean slavery sought to monitor labor movement between ports in the context of intense competition over labor by rendering masters holdings legible to the VOC. This is not to say that individual privately signed slave passes were nonexistent in Dutch ports or that fears of marronage were absent from the records of Indian Ocean slavery.Footnote 41 However, it is certain that for now, the Anglo-Dutch Caribbean, rather than the Indian Ocean, has attracted scholarly research on the pass issued to slaves.

From the mid-seventeenth century on, the pass signed by masters in the Atlantic became central to forced mobility.Footnote 42 In its effort to prevent slave flight, the Barbados government decreed in 1652 that all persons boarding ships had to show a “ticket under the Governor's hand” and if any alien captain carried any ticketless person, the next ship of that nation would be seized. The embarkation ticket soon became a ubiquitous travel document, and a tool of racializing labor mobility.Footnote 43 In the Dutch Atlantic, from 1710, persons of African descent or of mixed race required letters of permission from their masters to work at sea in addition to passports or documents of personal identity.Footnote 44 By 1742, all free persons of African or mixed descent had to give written proof of their freedom.Footnote 45 The paperwork of mobility intricately weaved state and non-state policing authorities. The pass empowered planters and overseers to act as slave hunters and incarnated the justice of peace as an extended arm of the patriarchal household.Footnote 46 The rules were broken and negotiated, Marisa Fuentes reminds us, albeit in ways that show they mattered.Footnote 47 Moreover, pass documents calibrated punitive power along racial lines. Penalties for slaves defaulting pass regulations were harsher than for servants. In Barbados, indentured servants also needed a pass to be absent from the plantation. If convicted for not having one, such a person had their period of indenture extended by a month.Footnote 48

The individuated slave pass became germane to the economy of Atlantic human trafficking and to the spatialization of segregation; that is, apartheid systems from Virginia to South Africa. In Virginia, in 1656, a pass similar to the slave pass was demanded of indigenous persons entering the colony to trade. In 1680, an exclusive slave law was dedicated to the pass. Sally Hadden notes that Virginia's pass laws prevailed until mid-nineteenth century.Footnote 49 In the Cape Colony, a proclamation of 1797 just after the second Xhosa wars, prohibited all natives from entering the colony without a badge or passport signed by the magistrate. The pass integrated media and legal architecture in the master's and governor's signature to calibrate a racial order of permanent suspicion across state and non-state bodies of law.

In the Indian Ocean, where under the Dutch, a system of registration monitored the transhipment of enslaved persons, the connection between the individualized slave pass and registration had begun to firm up as slavery was legally abolished. From that time on, the pass defined the scope of the mobility of convicts, indentured workers, and manumitted populations. At this time too, a shift occurred. As the individuated passes began to be more firmly anchored in systems of registration, they came to resemble good behavior bonds, a media-legal arrangement that expanded the jurisdiction of magistrates over workers and often restrained the freedom of mobility.

The Pass and the Register

The registered pass was an information genre created for containing labor mobility and strengthening racial segregation by permits. Between 1806 and 1830s, the pass integrated registration with good behavior bonds in response to the legal abolition of slavery. At the heart of this paperwork system was the conditionally free worker from whom labor had to be extracted. Thus, in 1828 Lord Dalhousie, as lieutenant governor of Nova Scotia, opposed the movement of black refugees into Nova Scotia after the War of 1812 because according to him, the refugees were slaves by habit: “their idea of freedom is idleness.”Footnote 50

Dalhousie's comments are evidence of the challenge posed by the abolition of slavery to a transoceanic global labor system upon which imperial geography was dependant. The officials and former slave owners sought to resolve their fear of juridical abolition by returning to paperwork. By the 1880s, documents, variously called “tickets of leave” or “tin tickets,” tethered specific bodies—convicts, indentured workers who had completed their contract, indigenous persons dispossessed to reserves, and groups decreed and classified as hereditary criminal castes —to registers kept in the custody of magistrate-agents. The registered pass system was nodal rather than centralizing, and through it, various diverse imperial offices such as protector of immigrants and the Indian agent were integrated with police stations and circumscribed the movement of workers by race, caste, and ethnicity.

Vismann defines the register as a cross reference system for databases that, till the emergence of the modern file, was the principle means of storing, transmitting and retrieving information.Footnote 51 But registers are not omniscient nor uniform: State registration projects not only emerge from non-state forms of registrationFootnote 52 to battle forgery and target select populations.Footnote 53 The registration of paper passes in the aftermath of abolition calibrated the degree of freedom of mobile workers. This happened when in addition to workers’ being registered, passes served as sureties for good behavior (a special exercise of the prerogative exercised by magistrates or justices of peace), just as human trafficking began to be coded as morally abhorrent.

In the common law tradition, binding undesirables upon recognizance to keep the king's peace as a preventive measure was long known.Footnote 54 Now the arrangements of the bond were folded into the pass system as it became the means to craft the uneven distribution of freedom. In many ways, this version of the pass fructified in the context of debates about slavery's abolition, which Diana Paton notes took place in the same discursive field as debates about punishment facilitated the expansion of magistracy or police power.Footnote 55 The pass built on those debates, by deepening the distinction between forms of labor while simultaneously placing them on a continuum in relation to idleness and enshrining them in law.Footnote 56 In the Indian Ocean too, this work of the pass system is best illustrated in British-controlled Mauritius.

Mauritius, like the broader world of the Indian Ocean arena, witnessed the consolidation of many bonded labor regimes (corvée, penal, and indentured) in response to abolitionist pressure.Footnote 57 The island was known to Arab, Malay, and Portuguese sailors from the tenth century onwards.Footnote 58 The Dutch intermittently occupied and settled Mauritius with slaves from Madagascar and convicts from Batavia (present day Jakarta) and abandoned the island in 1710.Footnote 59 The French East India Company occupied Mauritius in 1715, renamed it “Isle de France,” and integrated it into the Francophone legal system. They reshaped it as a slave plantation society with a version of the Code Noir in 1723, modelled on Caribbean sugar colonies and the nearby Reunion Island.Footnote 60 Mauritius's Port Louis, a free port, received both the enslaved and sojourners.Footnote 61 The enslaved worked in plantations and in houses; the manumitted lived with the free in the “Camp des Noirs” in St. Louis also called the “Malabar settlement.”Footnote 62 While some inhabitants of the Malabar settlement owned slaves, others also provided resources for slaves to flee to the city. Division and discrimination followed the intersecting fault lines of caste and ethnicity.Footnote 63

When the British seized Mauritius at the end of the Napoleonic Wars, these labor arrangements were largely undisturbed even as avenues for legal recognition of status and emancipation opened up. The control over mobility and liberation was exercised through paperwork. After the slave trade was banned in 1807, the island's Francophone planter class colluded with newly arrived British officials to consolidate sources of bonded labor by manipulating the imperially managed slave registry.

Imperial abolitionists had successfully advocated for the introduction of a slave registry from 1813 in Britain's crown colonies as a key aspect of their reformist campaign. Masters were tasked with registering their slaves. It was thought that registration would prevent an illegal slave trade and curtail the violence of masters. On their part, the enslaved in Barbados and elsewhere understood registration as a call for emancipation. Delays in its unfolding stimulated rebellion isevidence that paper stimulated new legal meanings even as the registers themselves were considered unreliable and prone to manipulation.Footnote 64 In Mauritius too, the registers disguised illegally imported slaves, as the abolitionists became well aware, while serving as evidence for compensation offered to planters after abolition.Footnote 65 At the time of abolition in 1835, the island had one of the largest slave populations in the British Empire, while also rapidly becoming a destination for indentured workers. The pass law was officialized alongside this transition. It curtailed the mobility of time-expired indenture workers (called “old immigrants”) and came to be integrated with police registers modeled on older marronage and vagrant registers.

The Mauritius police maintained marronage registers from the 1770s, if not earlier.Footnote 66 It was the first thing that the new British administration supported. Two days after he arrived on the island in 1810, Mauritius's first Governor Robert Farquhar, who had published a tract on the virtues of indenture work as an alternative to slavery, received a plea from slave owners for the return of runaways who had found refuge under the British flag.Footnote 67 Farquhar reissued orders that missing maroons would be apprehended. No slave could leave town or the master's habitation without a pass, and as before, government permission was required for manumission. (Farquhar would go on serve in his private capacity as the London attorney for colonial slave owners seeking compensation for emancipation).

Aside from protecting the interests of planters, Farquhar introduced convict workers to Mauritius,Footnote 68 extending to the island an Asian convict transportation network that had for long operated as a labor procurement system, but that tnow began to be supported as a replacement for slave labor.Footnote 69 Farquhar imported a penal labor regime to Mauritius building on his prior experience in Penang. Clare Anderson's account of these penal arrangements indicate their resonance with Australian penal colonial history. Governors in these latter penal settlements in Australia were given “property in service” by which they could put a convict to work. An imperial official, Alexander Maconochie, is credited with formulating the mark system of parole in the 1840s while in charge of the penal settlement at Norfolk Island.Footnote 70 After their period of service, convicts received a “ticket of leave,” signed by the governor's hand that permitted the individual to be employed in a circumscribed district and on the maintenance of good behavior or the governor's pleasure.Footnote 71

It is very likely that Farquhar formulated his convict management plan before Maconochie in ways that signal a desire to craft a labor regime whose associations with slavery would remain concealed. Anderson notes for instance that Farquhar's Proclamation 193 of 1816 ordered convicts, like government slaves before them, to work on public works, but rendered them subjects of colonial laws. Farquhar thus formulated a continuum of labor forms calibrated along degrees of unfreedom. The law was crafted in the penumbra of paper-fever, documents, and registers. From the perspective of the paperwork systems that are the subject of this article, it is striking that Farquhar's 1816 proclamation required a register of convicts to be kept to take notes on good conduct for which convicts were rewarded with tips. After 1819, convicts were permitted to hire themselves out as apprenticed servants or laborers after their period of compulsory service.Footnote 72 Soon after, their movement was managed by passes signed by employers.Footnote 73 The Mauritius convict pass like the Atlantic slave pass mobilized the signature of the employer.

It is significant that good behavior and personal registration became conditions for the mobility of racialized strangers a year after the convict pass became law. While Farquhar was still governor, a proclamation in 1817 enjoined strangers coming to Mauritius to procure security for their good behavior during their residence in the island. This proclamation was revived in 1829 when a large number of workers arrived and it was used to deport at least 329 men suspected of abandoning their work that year.Footnote 74 In Mauritius, the modeling of the pass on peace bonds first among convicts and then among migrants calibrated legal status against unemployment (or vagrancy), which invited deportation. We should consider that this tightening occurred precisely when Mauritius's increasingly vocal gen de couleur libre secured protection against discrimination and a status similar to that of Europeans before the law. The pass was thus entrenched in Mauritius before the abolition of slavery.

After emancipation, Ordinance 16 1835 used the passes to knit together the laws of vagrancy with master–servant laws.Footnote 75 Anyone unemployed was considered a vagabond and could be put to work. Those deemed vagabonds were to be placed under police surveillance and if convicted, imprisoned. For our purposes, it is significant that all expired service indentured workers entering the labor market had to register themselves with the police. They were given a ticket that included their name, birthplace, employment, marriage status, and the name of their employer.Footnote 76 The ordinances after abolition consolidated three important elements of the pass system. The pass was to be managed by the police station, shifting the authority of its supervisory power from the slave master to the police and magistracy. The Mauritius police was now empowered to undertake “vagrant hunts” modelled on old fugitive slave laws.Footnote 77 Second, the pass resembled in its information the data fields of the register rather than a letter of permission signed by the governor or slave holder. The ticket was a portable copy of the entries in the register. The pass circulated individual register entries rather than the master's or governor's signature. That is, the pass materialized and mobilized an architecture of information. As a correlate of the register, the pass served as a tracking device. The register was portable and moved with ease between the police bureau and other nodal points of the empire. In 1841, the immigration office received old registers from the police. Soon after Ordinance 22, 1847, workers who had served their period of indenture were compelled to go back to work and always carry the ticket as proof of status, and by 1846, all immigrants were to be registered and acquire a passport.Footnote 78 To be sans papiere would mean being arrested without a warrant. From 1864 to 1880s to be paperless meant being sent to the vagrant depot. The vagrant depot was previously the convict barracks built by Farquhar.Footnote 79 The Mauritius worker pass was thus inter-legal. Its form can be located at the intersection of different bodies of law governing the vagrant, the slave, the stranger, and the convict.

While the pass illuminates an inter-legal space crafted to constrain labor mobility, it also opened up the possibility of subversive or unforeseen legal interpretation on the part of the pass holder. Mauritian passes were objects of code breaking, self-differentiation, and public mobilization. Already in the Indian Ocean, Indian convicts arriving in British penal settlements in South East Asia refashioned their compulsory service as a type of military service—naukari (retainership) —for the Company rather than forced servitude, appropriating to their permit of restrained freedoms the idea that they were not enslaved.Footnote 80 Anand Yang notes that it is likely that glossing over of overseas transportation as naukari emerged after the establishment of colonial penal colonies.Footnote 81 There is some evidence that the pass system in Mauritius may have facilitated upward economic mobility. As “old immigrants,” the pass holders went on to become labor recruiters and creditors. There may have also been an effort to issue duplicate passes. After the pass system was introduced in the 1830s, there was an overall decline in the prosecution of vagrancy, possibly indicating the proliferation of duplicate passes.Footnote 82

Caste explicitly freighted the Mauritius pass showing how forms of immobility shaped the management of global labor mobility. The Report of the Royal Commissioners appointed to enquire into the treatment of immigrants in Mauritius favored the pass system because it “proved in every way to be better adapted for men in the state of civilization of the low caste natives who emigrate to these colonies [my emphasis].”Footnote 83 The commissioners presented the indentured resident pass as something that they were borrowing from the neighboring French colony of Reunion. However, the British Mauritius pass was in fact premised on good behavior bonds to prevent “roaming,” which had been used to curtail slaves, maroons, and convicts. Every “old immigrant” (i.e., those whose indenture period was completed) was now bound to report within a week of the expiry of the contract to the “Inspector of Police at the central station of the district and then, and there to justify his status by production of his ticket, and further to declare […] his [sic.] place of abode and occupation, employment or means of subsistence.”Footnote 84 A counterpart of the pass was maintained in the police station. The pass had to be signed by the police, have a photograph of bearer and operate as a voucher for the status of the bearer and render them free from molestation. The pass system created a context whereby except when working continuously under written contract, the worker was consistently under police watch. Like the former convicts of the Australian penal colonies, any worker, or as the manuals called them “immigrant” found outside the district of residence and “being unable to give a satisfactory reason for his [sic.] being there” could be arrested without warrant. Thus, arrested and produced before the magistrate, the worker could be sent back to the Immigration Depot for further enquiries. These rules were first promulgated as ordinances in (Ordinance 31), 1867 and then as laws by 1868.Footnote 85

The paperwork of passes spatially segmented labor through an information system. The register, a system of cross-reference, tethered the former indentured worker to the codes of good behavior. A machinery of indexes corresponding with uncial letters and italic letters were appended to registers for easy reference to locate individuals. The number of registers were corelated to estimates of the worker population in Mauritius. Thus, a system of reference and cross-reference for tracking and querying the passes were established. The information design allowed the distribution of the register, while the passes were printed in different colors for different districts. Specimens of the passes were posted in every police station. The variations of the Mauritius pass system found all over the indenture worker system inscribed racialized alien status under the supervision of magistrates (Figures 1 and 2).

Figure 1. Pass system information design in Ordinance 31, 1867

Figure 2. Pass and counter foil of the pass

Certainly the injustices of the pass laws themselves were an object of public mobilization. In 1871, a petition detailing the ills of the pass system particularly Ordinance 31, 1867 garnered 9401 workers’ signatures, anticipating by decades the campaigns led by Mohandas Gandhi against the pass laws targetting Asians in South Africa.Footnote 86 The petition, organized by workers and a German estate manager, Adolphe De Plevitz, discussed the nexus between the magistracy and the planters and the fees charged for good behavior tickets, and noted the continuity with slave ownership, vagrant hunts, and the widespread fear of arrest. In response to the petition, a Royal Commission was appointed to look into the treatment of immigrants in the islands. Although the commission confirmed the criticism of the system of indenture and noted the many deficiencies of the legal and bureaucratic paper arrangements of indentured labor regimes, it did not recommend the dismantling of the pass system. Indeed, by the late nineteenth century, pass laws made their way into many imperial jurisdictions to deem indigenous as strangers and to constrain racialized alien mobilities. The processes of dispossessing the indigenous and excluding Asians were certainly interlinked,Footnote 87 and were freighted by the racial calibration of legal subject-hood.

Conclusion

By illuminating the history of the pass over a long historical arc, this article has mapped the paperwork of mobility in the Indian Ocean. From facilitating the mobility of strangers and the forced mobility of slaves, individuated passes served as the infrastructure of racialized policing and anticipated pass law statutes of the nineteenth century. Yet, if passes were sites of code making, they were also an object of code breaking and a means to refashion legal meaning by pass holders in the interstices of law and empires. The scholarship on legal pluralism is myriad, but in its engagement with imperialism, it has signalled efforts to re-envision colonial law in terms of hybridity, fragmented jurisdictions, and negotiations around multiple normative orders (including those advanced by non-state authorities). Many studies of colonial legality in this vein have importantly centered the actions of litigants and colonial subjects as they navigated legal arenas to foreground a flexible or fluid view of imperial law. But while this push against a monist image of imperial law has challenged both the idea of law as command and a Euro-centric notion of law, the burden of accounting for an enduring racialized order cutting across state and non-state jurisdictions remains pressing. The pass was the material medium that circumscribed mobility the Indian Ocean according to norms of racial and caste hierarchy. It is an object and form that was inter-legal; it sorted persons into subjects of colonial slave, stranger, or indigenous law. The iterations of the pass thus make visible the dominion of documents in contexts of legal fragmentation or multiplicity. Documents, the pass shows, do not subsume law. Rather, a media history of the pass illustrates the document as an object that enabled racialized hierarchies and struggles over them to emerge from legal multiplicity.

Acknowledgments

The author thanks the participants and organizers of the Paperwork Empires workshop; Columbia University's Center of Comparative Media colloquium and Ceynep Celik; and the University of Western Ontario's Legal History Research Initiative and Rande Kostal for their valuable feedback on earlier versions of article. Suggestions by an anonymous reviewer for Law and History Review, Nandini Chatterjee, Melanie Newton, and Gautham Rao helped sharpen this article immeasurably. The author also owes a debt of gratitude to the work of many scholars whose valuable research and insights made it possible to write this article when the pandemic closed archives and libraries.

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65 On the unreliability of registers, see Barker, “Distorting the Record of Slavery.” Melanie Newton writes of the “whitening” of slave owners in the Barbados slave registry. Newton, The Children of Africa in the Colonies,18.

66 Richard Allen, Slaves, Freedman and Indentured Workers in Colonial Mauritius (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999), 39. Allen writes of five such registers that included the 1772–75 maroon capture book for the island and the 1799–1812 register of the Bureau du Marronage.

67 Deryck Skarr, Slaving and Slavery in the Indian Ocean (Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan, 1998), 94, fn. 26 and 27. The orders were passed in 1811.

68 Parliamentary Papers, Papers relating to East India affairs: viz. regulations passed by the governments of Bengal, Fort St George [Madras] and Bombay, in the Year 1816, XIII (1819): Regulation XIV, May 18, 1816, 38.

69 Asian convict transport has been widely studied. See Anand Yang, Empire of Convicts: Indian Penal Labor in Colonial Southeast Asia (Berkeley: University of California Press), 2021. Clare Anderson makes the explicit the coincidence between Asian convict transport and emancipation in Clare Anderson, ed., A Global History of Convicts and Penal Colonies (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018), 211–44.

70 Maconochie is often called the “father” of penal reform, because his well-publicized report on convict transportation presented to the British Parliament in 1838 was used by the Molesworth Committee to end transportation to New South Wales, and he subsequently formulated his “mark system” as commandant of the penal settlement at Norfolk Island.

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75 Ibid., 29.

76 Ibid., 30.

77 Allen, Slaves, Freedman and Indentured Workers, 54.

78 Report of the Royal Commissioners, 68 and 69.

79 See Saloni Deerpalsingh, “An Overview of Vagrancy Laws, Its Effects and Case Studies, 1860–1911,” in The Vagrant Depot of Grand River, Its Surroundings and Vagrancy in British Mauritius, ed. Vijayalakshmi Teelock (Port Louis: Aapravasi Ghat Trust Fund, 2004), 47–83.

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81 Ibid.

82 There was a decline in vagrancy-related arrests in 1861, but this was likely because of widespread requests for duplicates for lost passes: 12,500 duplicates were issued in 1861 and these numbers were ultimately reduced to 1126 in 1871. Report of the Royal Commissioners, 223.

83 Ibid., 129.

84 Ibid.

85 Ibid., 130.

86 Ibid., 16–22.

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Pass system information design in Ordinance 31, 1867

Figure 1

Figure 2. Pass and counter foil of the pass