Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Home
  • Content
    • Current
    • Archive
  • Info for
    • Authors
    • Subscribers
    • Institutions
    • Advertisers
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Editorial Board
    • Index/Abstracts
  • Connect
    • Feedback
    • Help
  • Alerts
  • Free Issue
  • Other Publications
    • UWP

User menu

  • Register
  • Subscribe
  • My alerts
  • Log in
  • My Cart

Search

  • Advanced search
African Economic History
  • Other Publications
    • UWP
  • Register
  • Subscribe
  • My alerts
  • Log in
  • My Cart
African Economic History

Advanced Search

  • Home
  • Content
    • Current
    • Archive
  • Info for
    • Authors
    • Subscribers
    • Institutions
    • Advertisers
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Editorial Board
    • Index/Abstracts
  • Connect
    • Feedback
    • Help
  • Alerts
  • Free Issue
  • Follow uwp on Twitter
  • Visit uwp on Facebook
  • Follow AEH on Bluesky

Table of Contents

November 16, 2016; Volume 44,Issue 1

Labor and Mobility in African History

Front Matter

  • You have accessRestricted access
    Front Matter
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 0440001_1;

Articles

  • You have accessRestricted access
    IntroductionHistories of Mobility, Histories of Labor, Histories of Africa
    ZACHARY KAGAN GUTHRIE
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 1-17; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.1
    ZACHARY KAGAN GUTHRIE
    Zachary Kagan Guthrie () is an assistant professor of history at the University of Mississippi. He earned his PhD in history from Princeton University in 2014 for a dissertation on the history of labor and mobility in Manica and Sofala, in central Mozambique, between 1940 and 1965. He has published two articles in the Journal of Southern African Studies and is the author of a forthcoming article in the International Journal of African Historical Studies. He is currently beginning a new book-length research project, on labor, social relations, and industrial development in Mozambique during the final phase of Portuguese colonial rule in the 1960s and 1970s.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • You have accessRestricted access
    Gendered Exclusion and ContestationMalawian Women’s Migration and Work in Colonial Harare, Zimbabwe, 1930s to 1963
    IREEN MUDEKA
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 18-43; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.18
    IREEN MUDEKA
    Dr. Ireen Mudeka () is currently a lecturer at Midlands State University in Zimbabwe. She earned a BA Honors Degree in Economic History and a Masters Degree in African Economic History at the University of Zimbabwe. After 2000, she obtained a Compton and MacArthur Foundation scholarship to pursue a PhD in African History at the University of Minnesota, where she earned a PhD in 2011 for a thesis on Malawian women’s migration. She has also conducted research into the role of women in Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle and the failure of Zimbabweans to mentally demobilize after the liberation war.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • You have accessRestricted access
    Earning an AgeMigration and Maturity in Colonial Kenya, 1895–1952
    PAUL OCOBOCK
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 44-72; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.44
    PAUL OCOBOCK
    Paul Ocobock () is an assistant professor of African History at the University of Notre Dame. His forthcoming book, An Uncertain Age: The Politics of Manhood in Kenya, published with Ohio University Press, examines the power of age and masculinity in the everyday lives of African young men and the crafting of the state in Kenya in the twentieth century.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • You have accessRestricted access
    Reinterpreting Labor Migration as Initiation Rite“Ghana Boys” and European Clothing in Dogon Country (Mali), 1920–1960
    ISAIE DOUGNON
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 73-90; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.73
    ISAIE DOUGNON
    Isaie Dougnon is a Professor of Anthropology at the University of Bamako, Mali. From 1998 to 2003, Professor Dougnon conducted research on migration and labour from Dogon Country Mali to the Office du Niger and to Ghana. His book ‘Travail de Blanc’ ‘Travail de Noir’: la migration des paysans dogons vers l’Office du Niger et au Ghana 1910–1980 was published in 2007 by Karthala. He has published numerous articles and held Humboldt and Fulbright fellowships. He is completing a second book manuscript, tentatively titled Lifecycle, Rites and Career in Modern Work.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
  • You have accessRestricted access
    PanyaEconomies of Deception and the Discontinuities of Indentured Labour Recruitment and the Slave Trade, Nigeria and Fernando Pó, 1890s–1940s
    ENRIQUE MARTINO
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 91-129; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.91
    ENRIQUE MARTINO
    Enrique Martino () received his PhD from Humboldt University Berlin in 2016. His published articles include “Dash-Peonage: The Contradictions of Debt Bondage on the Colonial Plantations of Fernando Pó,” in Africa; “Clandestine Recruitment Networks in the Bight of Biafra,” in International Review of Social History; and “Open Sourcing the Colonial Archive,” in History in Africa.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • You have accessRestricted access
    Migration and Forced Labor in the Social Imaginary of Southern Mozambique, 1920–1964
    HÉCTOR GUERRA HERNANDEZ
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 130-151; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.130
    HÉCTOR GUERRA HERNANDEZ
    Hector Guerra Hernandez () has been a Professor of African History at the Federal University of Paraná (UFPR) since August 2012. He earned his PhD in Social Anthropology in 2011 from the State University of Campinas (Unicamp), after earning a Master’s degree in Cultural Anthropology, Contemporary History and Sociology at the Latin American Institute of the Free University of Berlin in Germany in 2005. He has experience in the fields of Anthropology, Sociology and History, and conducts research into postcolonialism, postsocialism, ideology and culture, international migration and social conflicts. He spent many years conducting research into Latin American migration and social conflict in European contexts, before taking up his current research projects into the history and politics of southern Africa, with a particular focus on Mozambique.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • You have accessRestricted access
    Hunting “Wrongdoers” and “Vagrants”The Long-Term Perspective of Flight, Evasion, and Persecution in Colonial and Postcolonial Congo-Brazzaville, 1920–1980
    ALEXANDER KEESE
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 152-180; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.152
    ALEXANDER KEESE
    Alexander Keese () is Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) Research Professor at the University of Geneva (Switzerland). He is the author of Living with Ambiguity: Integrating an African Elite in French and Portuguese Africa, 1930–61 (Stuttgart: Steiner, 2007) and (with Philip Havik and Maciel Santos) of Administration and Taxation in Former Portuguese Africa (1900–1945) (Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015). He is also the author of numerous articles on African colonial history. His most recent monograph is Ethnicity and the colonial state: finding & representing group identifications in coastal West African and global perspective (1850–1960) (Leiden: Brill, 2016).
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • You have accessRestricted access
    “Nifa Nifa”Technopolitics, Mobile Workers, and the Ambivalence of Decline in Acheampong’s Ghana
    JENNIFER HART
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 181-201; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.181
    JENNIFER HART
    Jennifer Hart () is a professor of African history at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. She is the author of articles in the International Journal of African Historical Studies and the International Review of Social History. Her book, Ghana on the Go: African Mobility in the Age of Motor Transportation, was published by Indiana University Press in October 2016. She also writes a blog () and tweets at @detroittoaccra and @accramobile.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • You have accessRestricted access
    From Luanda and Maputo to BerlinUncovering Angolan and Mozambican Migrants’ Motives to Move to the German Democratic Republic (1979–1990)
    MARCIA C. SCHENCK
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 202-234; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.202
    MARCIA C. SCHENCK
    Marcia C. Schenck () is a PhD candidate in history at Princeton University. Her dissertation focuses on life histories of labor migrants from Angola and Mozambique to the former East Germany. She holds an MSc in African studies from the University of Oxford and a BA, summa cum laude, in international relations from Mount Holyoke College. Her previous work discussed San land rights and ethnicity in South Africa and Namibia. Her research interests include oral history, memory, migration, development, and labor history.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • You have accessRestricted access
    Tracing the Itineraries of Working Concepts across African History
    KATHRYN M. DE LUNA
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 235-257; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.235
    KATHRYN M. DE LUNA
    Kathryn de Luna () is Assistant Professor of History at Georgetown University. She studies the histories of eastern, central, and southern Africa focusing on the tenth century BCE through the nineteenth century CE and is interested in alternative historical sources. Her first book, Collecting Food, Cultivating People: Subsistence and Society in Central Africa, was published in the Agrarian Studies series by Yale University Press in 2016. She is currently working on a project that tracks ideas about and practices of mobility in south central Africa before the fifteenth century.
    • Find this author on Google Scholar
    • Find this author on PubMed
    • Search for this author on this site
    • For correspondence: [email protected]

Back Matter

  • You have accessRestricted access
    Back Matter
    African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 0440001_2;
Back to top
PreviousNext

In this issue

African Economic History: 44 (1)
African Economic History
Vol. 44, Issue 1
16 Nov 2016
  • Table of Contents
  • Table of Contents (PDF)
  • Index by author
Sign up for alerts

Jump to

  • Front Matter
  • Articles
  • Back Matter
  • Top Topics
  • Most Cited
  • Most Read
Loading
Enslaving Commodities
Promises and Pitfalls of Global Comparisons
“We Must Adapt to Survive”
UW Press logo

© 2025 Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System

Powered by HighWire