Global History of Agrarian Labor Regimes, 1750-2000

Conference, Cambridge, MA (USA), 25-27 April

Conf. Ann: Global History of Agrarian Labor Regimes, 1750-2000 - Cambridge, MA (USA) 04/13
Weatherhead Initiative on Global History (WIGH), Harvard University 25.04.2013-27.04.2013, Cambridge, MA (USA)
Harvard University, Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies, 27 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA, USA
Hosted by the Weatherhead Initiative on Global History (WIGH) at Harvard University (http://wigh.wcfia.harvard.edu)

For free registration, please email Jessica Barnard
(jbarnard [at] wcfia.harvard.edu)

Conference Program

Thursday, April 25

4-6:30 PM

Session I: International Impulses and Agrarian Change:

1. Paul Adams, Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania: Labor Force Demographics in Commercializing Agriculture - France and the Philippines, 1800-1940

2. Eric Vanhaute, University of Ghent, Belgium: Into Their Labors: Peasant Frontiers in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Towards a Comparative and Global Perspective

3. Rafael de Bivar Marquese, University of São Paolo, Brazil: From Veneto to São Paulo: The Global Crisis of Slavery and the Reconfiguration of the Coffee World Market, c.1860-1900

4. Meltem Toksöz, Bogaziçi University, Turkey: Nomadism, Migration and Seasonal Labor: Ottoman Anatolian Cotton Production in the Age of Industrialization

Commentator: Gerald Steiner, Harvard University

Friday, April 26

9:30-11:30

Session II: Slavery, Tenancy, Resistance:

1. Steven Serels, CMES, Harvard University: Famine and the Transition from Slave Labor to Free Labor in Northern Nilotic Sudan, 1898-1930

2. Christopher Craig, Columbia University: Hunger Games: Landlords, Tenants, and the Evolution of Agricultural Policy in Japan, 1897-1910

3. Adrian Smith, Carleton University, Canada: Law, Resistance and Pathways of Exit from Agrarian Labor Regimes

Commentator: Alison Frank Johnson, Harvard University

11:30-11:45 Coffee break

11:45-1:00

Session III: Colonial Labor; Comparative Regimes

1. Omar Gueye, Cheikh Anta Diop University, Dakar, Senegal: Unfree Labor, Unpaid Work, Low-paid Salaries and Poorest Citizens: Agrarian Labor World throughout French West Africa

2. Remijius Friday Obinta, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria: Land Tenure Practices, Cash-Crops Cultivation and Transformations in Agrarian Labor Regimes in the Countryside: A Case-Study of Rural South-Western Nigeria 1880-1990

Commentator: Cyrus Veeser, Bentley University

1:00-2:00 Lunch for registered participants

2-4 PM

Session IV: Contract Labor across Borders

1. Luis Plascencia, Arizona State University: Continental Contract Labor Regimes: The Formation and Indispensability of Agricultural Contract Labor Across Canada, Mexico, and the United States, 1909 to 2000

2. Amit K. Mishra, University of Hyderabad, India: Subtexts of Servitude: Indentured Indian Labor Regime in British Plantation Colonies

3. Amitava Chowdhury, Queens University, Ontario: The "Coolie" and the "Creole": Post-emancipation Labor Regimes and Identarian Invocations in the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean

Commentator: TBA

4:15-4:30 Coffee Break

4:30-6PM

Session V: Gendered Labor

1. Susie Jacobs, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK: Gendered Labor and Agrarian Reforms: An Overview

2. Keith Griffler, SUNY Buffalo: The Gendered Serfdom of African Women: The Colonial Agricultural Labor Regime and the Rise of Capitalism

Commentator: TBA

Saturday, April 27

9:30-10:45

Session VI: Commodity Production Compared

1. Willem van Schendel, University of Amsterdam: Agrarian Labor? Contrasting Indigo Production in Colonial India and Indonesia

2. Andrew Liu, Columbia University: The Two Tea Countries: Agrarian Labor in Coastal China and Eastern India in the Nineteenth Century

Commentator: Sugata Bose, Harvard University

Coffee break 10:45-11:00

11:00-1:00

Session VII: Constructing Regions, Integrating Nations

1. Iván Sandoval-Cervantes, University of Oregon: Shaping Subsistence Agriculture: Politics, Religion, and the Rural/Urban Divide in an Indigenous village in Oaxaca, Mexico, 1940-2000.

2. Julio Djenderedjian and Gustavo Paz, University of Buenos Aires/Conicet: A National Market in Progress. Traditional and Modern Agrarian Labor Regimes in Argentina, 1860s-1930s

3. Eric Hooglund, Lund University, Sweden: Iran's Changing Agricultural Labor and Production Regimes

Commentator: TBA

1:00-1:30

Wrap-up summaries

Sven Beckert and Charles Maier, Co-chairs of WIGH, Harvard University

Homepage
http://wigh.wcfia.harvard.edu/content/global-history-agrarian-labor-reg…

[Cross-posted, with thanks, from H-Soz-u-Kult]