White Mineworkers on Zambia's Copperbelt, 1926-1974

White Mineworkers on Zambia's Copperbelt, 1926-1974

  • Duncan Money
Publisher:BRILLISBN 13: 9789004467347ISBN 10: 9004467343

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White Mineworkers on Zambia's Copperbelt, 1926-1974 is written by Duncan Money and published by BRILL. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 9004467343 (ISBN 10) and 9789004467347 (ISBN 13).

Life and work on the Zambian Copperbelt – a concentrated industrialised mining region along the border with DR Congo – has been a perennial subject for Africanist historians. In this book, Duncan Money for the first time focusses on the white mineworkers who monopolised skilled jobs on the mines from the 1920s to the 1960s and became one of the most affluent groups of workers on the planet. Money argues that this group was a highly mobile global workforce which constituted, and saw itself as, a racialised working class. For much of the twentieth century, this white working class moved between mining and industrial centres across and beyond the British Empire and their actions and forms of organisation were strongly influenced by their international connections and by their mobility. These transnational connections, and the white working-class militancy they produced, played a crucial role in shaping social categories of race and class on the Copperbelt and determining the evolution of a region which quickly became one of the world’s largest sources of copper. See inside the book.