Permanent precarity: Capital and labour in the Central African copperbelt

This article provides a new history of mine capital and labour in the ‘Central African Copperbelt’ – the cross-border mining region of the Zambian copperbelt and Haut Katanga in the Democratic Republic of Congo. It doing so, it seeks to overcome the limitations of earlier structurally minded analysi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Larmer, M
Format: Journal article
Published: Taylor and Francis 2017
_version_ 1797079465089564672
author Larmer, M
author_facet Larmer, M
author_sort Larmer, M
collection OXFORD
description This article provides a new history of mine capital and labour in the ‘Central African Copperbelt’ – the cross-border mining region of the Zambian copperbelt and Haut Katanga in the Democratic Republic of Congo. It doing so, it seeks to overcome the limitations of earlier structurally minded analysis rooted in modernist notions regarding the transformative capacity of mining capital and a ‘new’ African working-class. Building on post-structuralist challenges to such assumptions, the article demonstrates the precarity, unevenness and uncertainty of the actually existing copperbelt economy and society. The comparison of the two copperbelt regions enables consideration of differential outcomes as a way of rethinking apparent inevitabilities. Analysis of how ideas about these mining societies were generated and circulated helps explain how dominant ways of understanding copperbelt capital and labour relations became established and continue to inform nostalgia for a ‘golden age’ of mining-fuelled prosperity at odds with historical reality.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T00:46:15Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:84c1cc91-24e4-4c9b-89b6-7a124f745990
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T00:46:15Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Taylor and Francis
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:84c1cc91-24e4-4c9b-89b6-7a124f7459902022-03-26T21:53:10ZPermanent precarity: Capital and labour in the Central African copperbeltJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:84c1cc91-24e4-4c9b-89b6-7a124f745990Symplectic Elements at OxfordTaylor and Francis2017Larmer, MThis article provides a new history of mine capital and labour in the ‘Central African Copperbelt’ – the cross-border mining region of the Zambian copperbelt and Haut Katanga in the Democratic Republic of Congo. It doing so, it seeks to overcome the limitations of earlier structurally minded analysis rooted in modernist notions regarding the transformative capacity of mining capital and a ‘new’ African working-class. Building on post-structuralist challenges to such assumptions, the article demonstrates the precarity, unevenness and uncertainty of the actually existing copperbelt economy and society. The comparison of the two copperbelt regions enables consideration of differential outcomes as a way of rethinking apparent inevitabilities. Analysis of how ideas about these mining societies were generated and circulated helps explain how dominant ways of understanding copperbelt capital and labour relations became established and continue to inform nostalgia for a ‘golden age’ of mining-fuelled prosperity at odds with historical reality.
spellingShingle Larmer, M
Permanent precarity: Capital and labour in the Central African copperbelt
title Permanent precarity: Capital and labour in the Central African copperbelt
title_full Permanent precarity: Capital and labour in the Central African copperbelt
title_fullStr Permanent precarity: Capital and labour in the Central African copperbelt
title_full_unstemmed Permanent precarity: Capital and labour in the Central African copperbelt
title_short Permanent precarity: Capital and labour in the Central African copperbelt
title_sort permanent precarity capital and labour in the central african copperbelt
work_keys_str_mv AT larmerm permanentprecaritycapitalandlabourinthecentralafricancopperbelt