Wage labor of Melanesians in Fiji in the 19th century

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The purpose of this research is to study the conditions of the emergence of Melanesian wage labor in Fiji in the 19th century and attempts to control it by the local government and the British government. The article examines the political, economic and social reasons for the recruitment and use of both the indigenous Fijian population and imported workers from other islands of Melanesia. The author suggests a conditional division of the study period into two stages based on the economic and political factors that led to the hiring of labor. The first agreements between European traders and Fijian chiefs on the provision of labor are being investigated. The processes of hiring and working conditions of Melanesians on plantations are described. The article observes the beginning of illegal labor trade in the region. An assessment of the systems of legislation aimed at controlling the trade in labor is given. The work includes the views of government officials and the public on the issue of bonded labor of hired workers. A conclusion is drawn about the causes and consequences of the exploitation of the indigenous peoples of Melanesia in both the pre-colonial and colonial periods of Fiji's 19th century history. The author points out the imperfection of the UK legislative system in the control of labor trafficking in the Pacific region.

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Sobre autores

Andrey Mnukhin

Don State Technical University

Autor responsável pela correspondência
Email: mnukhin.andrey@mail.ru
ORCID ID: 0009-0004-6027-3390

Lecturer

Rússia, Taganrog

Bibliografia

  1. Banivanua-Mar T. Violence and Colonial Dialogue: The Australian-Pacific Indentured Labor Trade, University of Hawa’I Press, Honolulu, 2007.
  2. Campbel I. C. Worlds Apart: A History of the Pacific Islands, Canterbury University Press, SBN: 978-1-927145-02-9, 2011, 392 p.
  3. Hunt D. Hunting the Blackbirder: Ross Lewin and the Royal Navy. Journal of Pacific History. No. 42 (1)., 2007. Рp. 37–53.
  4. Melillo E.D. Making sea cucumber out of whales’ teeth: Nantucket castaways and encounters of value in nineteenth century Fiji. Environmental History. Vol. 20. No. 3. July 2015. Рp. 449–474.
  5. Naidu V. State Class and Politics in the South Pacific with Case Studies of Fiji and Western Samoa, PhD, University of Sussex. 1998.
  6. Munro D. The Labor trade in Melanesians to Queensland: an historiographic essay. Journal of Social History. Oxford University Press, Vol. 28. No. 3,1995. Рp. 609–627.
  7. Ward W.E.F. The Royal Navy and the Slavers: The Suppression of the Atlantic Slave Trade, Taylor & Francis, 2022. 256 p.

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