Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-7nlkj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-28T16:43:27.888Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Transport Workers, Strikes and the “Imperial Response”: Africa and the Post World War War II Conjuncture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

Wartime causes [of the 1942 agitation] include the hardship caused by…sudden strain to which the workers have been subjected in an effort to increase efficiency and output simultaneously; inescapable privations necessary to satisfy the needs and demands of the Metropolis of the Empire.

Memorandum of the Land and Survey African Technical Workers Union of Nigeria (Great Britain, 1946: 117)

Maybe it would be better to have employees controlled by Mr. Patrick than by Mr. Stalin and to be quite candid I think that is at the bottom of it all. I think that we have got to face the fact that if we don't get labour organised and controlled we shall be up against much bigger problems when they organise themselves.

An elected member of the Kenya Legislature in 1947 (Quoted in Singh, 1969: 194)

A wave of general strikes and urban protest, reaching from Durban to Tunis, and from Dakar to Dar es Salaam, took place in Africa in the years immediately following the Second World War. While each general strike possessed its own specific features, taken together the strikes shared several common characteristics. They were all primarily economically motivated, and African workers initiated and led them. The most salient feature of this unrest was the participation of all segments of the urban population, because its structural causes were economic conditions which deleteriously affected whitecollar civil servants and unskilled laborers alike. Furthermore, railway and dock workers in particular often assumed prominent roles. The strikes demonstrated the existence of contradictions in colonial social formations which required resolution, and authorities throughout British Africa reacted in a similar manner.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Allen, C.H. 1975. “Union-Party Relationships in Francophone West Africa: A Critique of ‘Teleguidage’ Interpretations,” pp. 99125 in Sandbrook, Richard and Cohen, Robin (eds.) The Development of an African Working Class. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Ananaba, Wagu. 1970. The Trade Union Movement in Nigeria. New York: Africana.Google Scholar
Barclays Bank. 1948. A Bank in Battledress. Cape Town.Google Scholar
Bauer, P.T. 1963. West African Trade: A Study of Competition, Oligopoly and Monopoly in a Changing Economy. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Bell, Philip. 1956. The Sterling Area in the Postwar World: Internal Mechanism and Cohesion, 1946-1952. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Brown, Carolyn Anderson. 1985. “A History of the Development of Workers' Consciousness of the Coal Miners at Enugu Government Colliery, Nigeria, 1914-1950.” Ph.D. thesis, Columbia University.Google Scholar
Cairncross, Alex. 1981. Years of Recovery: British Economic Policy 1945-51. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Clayton, Anthony. 1976. The 1948 Zanzibar General Strike. Uppsala: The Scandinavian Institute of African Studies.Google Scholar
Clayton, Anthony and Savage, Donald. 1974. Government and Labor in Kenya 1895-1963. London: Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Cohen, Robin, 1977. “Michael Imoudu and the Nigerian Labour Movement.” Race & Class 1/4: 345–62.Google Scholar
Cohen, Robin. 1980. “Resistance and Hidden Forms of Consciousness Amongst African Workers.” Review of African Polical Economy 19: 822.Google Scholar
Cohen, Robin and Hughes, Arnold. 1978. “An Emerging Nigerian Working Class: The Lagos Experience 1897-1939,” pp. 3155 in Gutkind, Peter, Cohen, Robin and Copans, Jean (eds.) African Labor History. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Conan, A.R. 1966. The Problem of Sterling. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Dadoo, Y.M. 1949. “Africa and World Affairs.” United Asia 2/3: 222–25.Google Scholar
Dalley, F.W. 1947. Trade Union Organisation and Industrial Relations in Trinidad. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Donnison, F.S.V. 1956. British Military Administration in the Far East. 1943-46. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Dumett, Raymond. 1985. “Africa's Strategic Minerals During the Second World War.” Journal of African History 26/4: 381408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fawzi, Saad. 1957. The Labour Movement in the Sudan 1946-1955. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gardner, Richard. 1980. Sterling-Dollar Diplomacy in Current Perspective. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Coast, Gold. 1946. Gold Coast Railway and Takoradi Harbour. Accra: Government Printing department.Google Scholar
Coast, Gold. 1947. Report on the Gold Coast. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Great Britain. Colonial Office. 1943. Labour Supervision in the Colonial Empire 1937-1943. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Great Britain. Colonial Office. 1946. Enquiry into the Cost of Living and the Control of the Cost of Livinq in the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Great Britain. Colonial Office. 1947. Report on Tanganyika. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Great Britain. Colonial Office. 1948a. Report of the Commission of Enquiry Into Disturbances in the Gold Coast. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Great Britain. Colonial Office. 1948b. Report on Tanganyika. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Hailey, Lord. 1938. An African Survey. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
David, Hemson. 1977. “Dock Workers, Labour Circulation, and Class Struggles in Durban, 1940-59.” Journal of Southern African Studies 4/1: 88124.Google Scholar
Hill, M. F. 1957a. Permanent Way: The Story of the Kenya and Uganda Railway. Nairobi: East African Railways and Harbours.Google Scholar
Hill, M. F. 1957b. Permanent Way: The Story of the Tanganyika Railway. Nairobi: East African Railways and Harbours.Google Scholar
Hodson, H. V. 1938. Slump and Recovery 1929-1937. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hunton, William A. 1957. Decision in Africa: Sources of Current Conflict. New York: International Publishers.Google Scholar
Iliffe, John. 1970. “A History of the Dockworkers of Dar es Salaam.” Tanzania Notes & Records 71: 119–48.Google Scholar
Janmohamed, Karim. 1978. “A History of Mombasa c. 1895-1939: Some Aspects of Economic and Social Life in an East African Port Town During Colonial Rule.” Ph.D. thesis, Northwestern University.Google Scholar
Jeffries, Richard. 1978. Class, Power and Ideology in Ghana: The Railwaymen of Sekondi. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnstone, Frederick A. 1976. Class, Race and Gold: A Study of Class Relations and Racial Discrimination in South Africa. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Joseph, Richard. “Settlers, Strikers and Sans-Travail: The Douala Riots of September, 1945.” Journal of African History 15/4: 669–87.Google Scholar
Killingray, David. 1986. “Labour Mobilisation in British Colonial Africa for the War Effort, 1939-46,” pp. 6896 in Killingray, David and Rathbone, Richard (eds.) Africa and the Second World War. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Kindleberger, Charles. 1973. The World in Depression 1929-1939. Berkeley: The University of California Press.Google Scholar
Langley, J. Ayedele. 1973. Pan-Africanism and Nationalism in West Africa 1900-1945: A Study in Ideoloqy and Social Classes. Oxford: The Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Lee, J.M. 1977. “‘Forward Thinking’ and War: The Colonial Office during the 1940s.” Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 6/1.Google Scholar
Leubuscher, Charlotte. 1956. Bulk Buying From the Colonies. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Louis, Wm. Roger and Robinson, Ronald. 1982. “The United States and the Liquidation of British Empire in Tropical Africa, 1941-1951,” pp. 3155 in Gifford, Prosser and Louis, Wm. Roger (eds.) The Transfer of Power in Africa: Decolonization 1940-1960. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Morgan, D. J. 1980. The Official History of Colonial Development: Volume 1: The Origins of British Aid Policy. 1924-45. Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press.Google Scholar
Morgan, Michael. 1977. “The Rise and Fall of Malayan Trade Unionism, 1945-50,” pp. 150–98 in Amin, Mohamed and Caldwell, Malcolm (eds.) Malaya: The Making of a Neo-Colony. Nottingham: Spokesman.Google Scholar
Nigeria, . 1948. Report on Nigeria. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
O'Meara, Dan. 1977. “The 1946 African Mine-Workers' Strike in the Political Economy of South Africa,” in Bonner, P. L. (ed.) Working Papers in Southern African Studies: Papers Presented at A.S.I. African Studies Seminar.Google Scholar
Orde Browne, Major G. St. J. 1933. The African Labourer. London: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orde Browne, Major G. St. J. 1946. Labour Conditions in East Africa. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Oyemakinde, Wale. 1977. “The Impact of the Great Depression on the Nigerian Railway and its Workers.” Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria 8/4: 143–60.Google Scholar
Padmore, George. 1949. Africa: Britain's Third Empire. London: Dennis Dobson.Google Scholar
Pearce, R.D. 1982. The Turning Point in Africa: British Colonial Policy 1938-48. London: Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Post, Ken. 1978. Arise Ye Starvelinqs: The Jamaican Labour Rebellion of 1938 and its Aftermath. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.Google Scholar
Post, Ken. 1981. Strike the Iron: A Colony at War: Jamaica 1939-1945. Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press.Google Scholar
Prest, A. R. 1948. War Economics of Primary Producing Countries. Cambridge: University Press.Google Scholar
Rathbone, Richard. 1978. “World War I and Africa: An Introduction.” Journal of African History 19/1: 19.Google Scholar
Roberts, B.C. 1964. Labour in the Tropical Territories of the Commonwealth. Durham: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Singh, Mahkan. 1969. History of Kenya's Trade Union Movement to 1952. Nairobi: East African Publishing House.Google Scholar
Smith, Tony. 1982. “Patterns in the Transfer of Power: A Comparative Study of French and British Decolonization,” pp. 87115 in Gifford, Prosser and Louis, Wm. Roger (eds.) The Transfer of Power in Africa: Decolonization 1940-1960. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Spencer, John. 1985. The Kenya African Union. London: KPI Limited.Google Scholar
Stenson, M. R. 1970. Industrial Conflict in Malaya: Prelude to the Communist Revolt of 1948. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Stichter, Sharon. 1975a. “The Formation of a Working Class in Kenya,” pp. 2148 in Sandbrook, Richard and Cohen, Robin (eds.) The Development of an African Working Class. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Stichter, Sharon. 1975b. “Workers, Trade Unions, and the Mau Mau Rebellion.” Journal of African Studies 9/2: 259–75.Google Scholar
Stichter, Sharon. 1978. “Trade Unionism in Kenya, 1947-1952: The Militant Phase,” pp. 155–74 in Gutkind, Peter, Cohen, Robin and Copans, Jean (eds.) African Labor History. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Suret-Canale, J. 1978. “The French West African Railway Workers' Strike, 1947-1948,” pp. 129–54 in Gutkind, Peter, Cohen, Robin and Copans, Jean (eds.) African Labor History. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Tanganyika, . 1946. Annual Report of the Labour Department. Dar es Salaam: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Tanganyika, . 1948. Annual Report of the Labour Department. Dar es Salaam: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Thompson, Virginia. Labor Problems in Southeast Asia. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
United Nations. 1948. Economic Report. Lake Success: U.N.Google Scholar
United Nations. 1949a. Inflationary and Deflationary Tendencies 1946-48. Lake Success: U.N.Google Scholar
United Nations. 1949b. World Economic Report. Lake Success: U.N.Google Scholar
Woddis, Jack. 1961. Africa: The Lion Awakes. New York: Lawrence and Wisehart.Google Scholar
Zanzibar, . 1949. Report on Zanzibar. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Elliot, Zupnick. 1957. Britain's Postwar Dollar Problem. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar