Mobilizing Labour for the Global Coffee Market: Profits From an Unfree Work Regime in Colonial Java
Abstract
Coffee has been grown on Java for the commercial market since the early eighteenth century, when the Dutch East India Company began buying from peasant producers in the Priangan highlands. What began as a commercial transaction, however, soon became a system of compulsory production. This book shows how the Dutch East India Company mobilised land and labour, why they turned to force cultivation, and what effects the brutal system they installed had on the economy and society.
Keywords
forced labour; coffee; cultivation system; colonialism; java; Corvée; Dutch East India Company; Herman Willem Daendels; Parahyangan; PeasantDOI
10.26530/OAPEN_597440ISBN
9789089648594OCN
952057922Publisher
Amsterdam University PressPublisher website
https://www.aup.nl/Publication date and place
2015Series
Social Histories of Work in Asia,Classification
Colonialism and imperialism