1st Edition

Jamaican Labor Migration White Capital And Black Labor, 1850-1930

By Elizabeth McLean Petras Copyright 1988
    308 Pages
    by Routledge

    308 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book traces the historical process of the West Indian Labour Recruitment and migration out of Jamaica after the demise of the sugar industry. It examines how the availability of Jamaican immigrant labor between 1850 and 1930 fueled the accumulation of capital for entrepreneurs and investors.

    Historical Background to the Formation of a Migratory Labor Reserve in the Nineteenth Century -- Class Formation and the Creation of a Labor Reserve in Jamaica -- Jamaicans in Panama -- The French Canal -- Organization of Labor Recruitment in the Caribbean: The U.S. Isthmian Canal Commission, 1904–1914 -- Rationalization of Construction: Machine Technology and Scientific Management Under the U.S. Isthmian Canal Commission -- The Social Costs of Construction of the U.S. Isthmian Canal -- From Migrant to Immigrant: The Thruway Completed -- Jamaicans in Cuba and Jamaicans at Home: Labor Migration in a Period of Economic Crisis -- Labor Export in an Era of Global Economic Contraction: Ramifications for Jamaica