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3 - Asian indentured and colonial migration
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- By Mitsuru Shimpo, Japan Women's University, Ong Jin Hui, National University, Steven Vertovec, University of Warwick, Ravinder K. Thiara, University of Warwick, Darshan Singh Tatla, South Birmingham College, Michael Twaddle, University of London
- Edited by Robin Cohen, University of Warwick
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- Book:
- The Cambridge Survey of World Migration
- Published online:
- 05 December 2012
- Print publication:
- 02 November 1995, pp 45-76
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- Chapter
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Summary
Viewed on a global scale, unfree labour was the predominant form of labour control until a date much later than many might suppose. Even in Europe, Steinfield (cited Brass et al. 1993: 8) suggests that free labour, conceived in the sense of the freedom to choose one's employer, did not become a dominant legal ideal until the later eighteenth century and not the dominant paradigm until the nineteenth. Lucassen (in Brass et al. 1993: 10–18) alludes to three forms of productive unfree labour in the Old World and the Atlantic system – small-scale household, farm and artisan labour; large-scale plantation and mining labour; and unfree service as soldiers and sailors. As the same author notes, a number of scholars (for example, Paterson 1982, 1991; Curtin 1990) have demonstrated considerable continuities in the deployment of unfree labour. Moreover, a link between classical slavery and modern slavery has been established via Syria and Palestine, Cyprus, Sicily, Spain, the Azores and thence to the Americas.
Slavery disappeared in north-west Europe only to be replaced by servitude. The gradual progress to free labour and to independent economic activity in that part of Europe was, however, in marked contrast to the reintroduction of serfdom (the so-called ‘second serfdom’) in eastern Europe. Serfdom was only formally abolished in Poland in 1800 and in Russia in 1861. Naturally, legal prohibition concealed the continuation of other forms of unfree labour, including the ‘industrial slaves’ of the late nineteenth-century.