Books on the topic 'Plantation labourers'

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1

Khawas, Vimal. Socio-economic conditions of tea garden labourers in Darjeeling hills. New Delhi: Council for Social Development, 2006.

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2

The conditions of migrant labour in Masaka District, 1900-1962: The case of coffee shamba labourers. Kampala, Uganda: Centre for Basic Research, 1989.

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3

1955-, Sengupta Sarthak, ed. The tea labourers of North East India: An anthropo-historical perspective. New Delhi: Mittal Publications, 2009.

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4

The tea labourers of North East India: An anthropo-historical perspective. New Delhi: Mittal Publications, 2009.

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5

1955-, Sengupta Sarthak, ed. The tea labourers of North East India: An anthropo-historical perspective. New Delhi: Mittal Publications, 2009.

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6

S, Karotemprel, Datta-Ray B. 1925-, North-East India Council for Social Science Research., and Sacred Heart Theological College (Shillong, India), eds. Tea garden labourers of north east India: A multidimensional study on the Adivasis of the tea gardens of north east India. Shillong: Vendrame Institute, 1990.

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7

Migration and human variation: A study on tribal tea-labourers. New Delhi, India: Mittal Publications, 2014.

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8

Lenehan, Sara. Child migration in the Udaipur district: An investigation into the impact of BT cotton fields on child labourers. Udaipur: Seva Mandir, 2005.

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9

Ibrahim, Zawawi. The Malay labourer: By the window of capitalism. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1998.

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10

Overseers of Early American Slavery: Supervisors, Enslaved Labourers, and the Plantation Enterprise. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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11

Sandy, Laura R. Overseers of Early American Slavery: Supervisors, Enslaved Labourers, and the Plantation Enterprise. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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12

Sandy, Laura R. Overseers of Early American Slavery: Supervisors, Enslaved Labourers, and the Plantation Enterprise. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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13

Sandy, Laura R. Overseers of Early American Slavery: Supervisors, Enslaved Labourers, and the Plantation Enterprise. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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14

Sandy, Laura R. Overseers of Early American Slavery: Supervisors, Enslaved Labourers, and the Plantation Enterprise. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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15

Kumar, Purnendu. State and Society in North-East India ; A Study of Immigrant Tea Plantation Labourers. Regency Publications, 2006.

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16

Plantation labours of North-east India. Dibrugarh: N.L. Publishers, 1997.

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17

Kiple, Kenneth F. Biology and African Slavery. Edited by Mark M. Smith and Robert L. Paquette. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199227990.013.0014.

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This article reviews scholarship on the biology of African slaves. Mother Africa ensured that her sons and daughters could tolerate a disease environment sufficiently harsh that it served as a barrier to European outsiders for many centuries, keeping them confined to the coast and, save for some notable exceptions, away from the interior. Falciparum malaria and yellow fever, however, the chief ramparts in this barrier, did not remain confined to Africa. Rather, they reached the Americas with the Atlantic slave trade to rage among non-immune white and red people alike. But they largely spared blacks who were relatively resistant to these African illnesses, as well as to the bulk of those Eurasian diseases whose ravages were mostly directed at indigenous peoples. The sum of these pathogenic susceptibilities and immunities added up to the elimination of the latter (and white indentured servants) as contenders for tropical plantation labourers, and placed that onus squarely on the shoulders of the Africans. Yet, such a nomination in an age of rationalism bore with it the notion that black people, because of their ability to resist fevers, were sufficiently different biologically from Europeans as to constitute a separate branch of humankind and a lower one at that.
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18

Garrigus, John. French Caribbean. Edited by Mark M. Smith and Robert L. Paquette. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199227990.013.0009.

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This article reviews scholarship on the history and historiography of slavery in the French Caribbean. Pierre d'Esnambuc, a Norman sailor, planted France's first Caribbean colony on the tiny Lesser Antillean island of St Christopher in 1625. The settlement contained several dozen slaves. Although Great Britain removed this French foothold at the end of the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14), slavery expanded under French auspices, albeit in fits and starts, to other islands during the seventeenth century. Slavery peaked in the French Caribbean during the eighteenth century as French slave traders carried more than one million slaves to the Americas. Most slaves in the French Caribbean laboured on plantations and in other commercial enterprises.
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