In January 2021, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and his cabinet resigned in the wake of a startling scandal. For six consecutive years between 2013–19, Dutch tax authorities had wrongfully accused over 26,000 families of fraudulently collecting childcare allowances. Authorities in the Tax and Customs Administration alleged that thousands of families had pocketed a benefit that paid working parents for a percentage of the cost of childcare, which is not publicly funded in the Netherlands. Many of the families accused were ordered to repay tens of thousands of euros in childcare allowances, plunging households into enduring financial ruin.Footnote 1 But perhaps the most striking fact of the childcare benefits scandal (toeslagenaffaire) was the seemingly deliberate targeting of people of non-European ethnic origin – including citizens from Caribbean territories under Dutch sovereignty – and individuals holding dual nationality. Despite this, the parliamentary investigation into the scandal declined to explore the role of ethnic or racial discrimination.Footnote 2 The question of how a government institution came to equate non-European born Dutch citizens with abuse of the welfare state remained, to the great consternation of victims and racial justice activists, unaddressed.Footnote 3
This was not the first time in the Netherlands that perceived outsiders were accused of exploiting social assistance. Similar assumptions played a formative role in shaping the Dutch welfare state as it overlapped with the end of empire. After 1965, the Dutch welfare state transformed from one of Europe's smallest to one of its largest social safety nets. But the universal insurance and disability schemes that made the Dutch welfare state the envy of continental progressives would be called into question by the 1970s and significantly eroded by the mid-1990s.Footnote 4 In the 1970s, shocks to the global oil and gas economy coincided with decolonisation and growing migration from the former Dutch colonies of Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles.Footnote 5 The tens of thousands of people who moved from the Caribbean to the erstwhile metropole sought relief from looming restrictions on the rights of citizenship and economic redress in a highly stratified commonwealth forged through centuries of colonialism. As Dutch citizens, they possessed ostensibly unfettered access to the Dutch welfare state. Yet, throughout the following decades, social scientists commissioned by state and municipal actors fastidiously tabulated Caribbean interactions with the welfare state. Their most abiding preoccupation was the ‘matrifocal’ family structure of Dutch citizens from the Caribbean, imagined as fundamentally heterosexual if not properly heteronormative.Footnote 6 Although growing numbers of white European Dutch women were also uncoupling marriage and reproduction during this time, social scientists drew on an existing corpus of Black family studies developed decades earlier, contributing to perceptions of a fundamental incompatibility between Caribbean kinship and the demands of mainstream Dutch society. The result was an eroded faith in the ability of welfare to solve social inequality.
In order to understand this trajectory, it is important to consider the transnational itinerancy of racial knowledge that informed expert assertions in the Netherlands. Emerging in the 1930s and 1940s in the United States and colonial Caribbean, Black family studies was initially designed to inform policy in the context of accelerating urban migration and labour rebellions that threatened the stability of white hegemony and colonial rule.Footnote 7 This very same knowledge circulated in an enlarged transimperial geography, travelling not just north and south across the Caribbean Sea but also east across the Atlantic. In the age of decolonisation in Europe, the revival of this intellectual programme remained wedded to policy objectives but now became oriented toward a different task. Over subsequent decades, authorities in the Netherlands used this knowledge to assess prospects for integrating Caribbean Dutch citizens into metropolitan society, in the 1970s defending more interventionist social programs but, in the 1980s, as the welfare state was dismantled, supporting claims that economic improvement would not alter ‘cultural’ practices.Footnote 8 Eventually, these studies were deployed to illustrate that the putatively unchanging qualities of Caribbean kinship would tax the European welfare state. A science of colonial reform thus became a science of retrenchment.
Focusing on the science that informed state policy yields new insights about Dutch society in the postwar era. As scholars of Britain and France have recently shown, empire's end was intimately intertwined with the trajectory of welfarism.Footnote 9 In the Netherlands too, the circulation of racial knowledge informed the supposedly colour-blind development of the welfare state as decolonisation inaugurated significant internal movements across the Kingdom of the Netherlands, a commonwealth encompassing the Netherlands, Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles bound by Dutch sovereignty and common citizenship.Footnote 10 While scholars have often heralded the reduction of social spending in the Netherlands as a ‘miracle’ achieved through stunning social consensus and resulting in impressive wealth and job creation, the perception that welfare retrenchment was especially benign and immune to racist manipulation (in marked contrast to the US ‘War on Welfare’) appears dubious when considering how the welfare state and its scientists responded to Caribbean migration.Footnote 11
By tracking the movement of racial knowledge and notions of public obligation imperilled as a result, this article joins a growing body of scholarship that contends that assumptions about race and racism have palpably shaped Dutch society and its institutions – evident not least in the qualification of the rights of Caribbean Dutch people, who are frequently understood as ‘outsiders’ despite their Dutch citizenship.Footnote 12 Though Dutch authorities no longer employed the word ‘race’ or used it as an administrative category following the violence of the Holocaust and the Second World War, in publicly-funded research, the consolidation of group identities based on kinship offers powerful evidence for the process by which ‘family becomes racial ontology’,Footnote 13 ushering in racist essentialisms through the backdoor of culturalist arguments about family life.
Finally, this paper shows that, contrary to the consensual narrative of welfare retrenchment in the Netherlands, state expertise and the reduction of social spending did not go uncontested.Footnote 14 Oppositional voices emerged among social welfare organisations established by Caribbean Dutch people who identified state-funded knowledge production as uniquely harmful, promoting stereotypes of pathological dependency while weakening institutional support for Caribbean families. But activists did not dismiss expertise entirely. They called for a renewed intellectual agenda that studied racism within Dutch society and advocated for public services like childcare, community centres and family allowances. Ultimately, activist efforts to claim emancipation through the welfare state ran aground on the erosion of social spending throughout the 1980s and 1990s.
Drawing upon archival sources from Dutch state and municipal bodies as well as the published works and personal papers of prominent figures in Black family studies in Europe, the United States and the Caribbean, this paper tracks how knowledge about race and the family moved and to what ends. It argues that expert knowledge played a role in the organisation of the welfare state from the onset of increased Caribbean migration in the early 1970s to 1996, when important social legislation was overhauled. It begins by surveying the origins of a Black family studies programme and its relationship to racialised systems of governance in the United States and the Caribbean to outline the debates that captivated social scientists and bureaucrats in the Netherlands decades later. Secondly, the article turns toward Dutch state investment in social scientific research in the 1970s, which emerged to track Caribbean Dutch citizens in the welfare state. It then examines expert attempts to define and categorise the family in view of administrative demands and changing norms in European Dutch society, a process that constructed race through the taxonomy of kinship. Finally, it concludes by exploring the strident defence of public obligation launched by Caribbean Dutch organisations in the Netherlands, who at once criticised the effects of hegemonic knowledge production while reimagining the emancipatory potential of expertise in a climate of austerity.
Black Kinship Studies in an Age of Rebellion and Reform
Before racial knowledge settled in the Dutch welfare state, a significant literature on working-class Black kinship practices had already begun to develop earlier in the twentieth century. Hardly a neutral focus of scholarly investigation, social scientific fixation with Black kinship stemmed from colonial–racial tropes that constructed Blackness through ascriptions of sexual laxity and gender deviance.Footnote 15 From its inception, the Black family studies programme of the 1930s and 1940s was a transnational effort aimed at concrete policy objectives.Footnote 16 During the era of Great Migration in the United States, which saw millions of African Americans leave the rural south for urban metropolises, social scientific study of Black family life expanded precipitously. Prominent institutions funded research on changing urban landscapes and even expanded the scope of their efforts to the Caribbean, where US presence in the region and increased emigration to the United States also galvanised the production of knowledge in the first half of the twentieth century.Footnote 17 US social scientists collaborated with European and elite Caribbean interlocutors after labour disturbances rocked the British Caribbean in the late 1930s, prompting colonial authorities to conscript knowledge production for the purpose of colonial development and reform. These studies set the agenda for future research in the United States, the Caribbean and Europe for many decades to come.
One of the most significant disputes to shape the emerging study of Black kinship concerned the origins of the so-called matrifocal family. The widely publicised debate between the US sociologist E. Franklin Frazier and anthropologist Melville Herskovits initiated the discussion in the 1930s.Footnote 18 Frazier's landmark The Negro Family in the United States (1939) expounded on the role of slavery and racial and economic subordination in shaping what were, in Frazier's view, unstable ties within Black families. In the context of US urban environments, the alleged marginality of biological fathers and the centrality of women bred cyclical social ills that independently perpetuated poverty. Frazier's thought was, in fact, more complex than the caricatured version of his argument that would long survive him; and, as others have pointed out, for Frazier and other Black social scientists seeking institutional and financial support in a highly segregated academic landscape, ‘embracing the standards of objectivity meant adopting – and adapting – the idioms of social ecology, human development and personality and culture as analytic frames'.Footnote 19 Contrary to Frazier, Herskovits insisted in his The Myth of the Negro Past (1941) that the endurance of West African cultural practices habituated women of African descent to closer bonds with their children. Where Frazier saw various social and economic forces ‘disorganising’ the Black family in the United States, Herskovits saw continuities, or ‘survivalisms’, that linked the cultures of the African continent to the African diaspora in the Americas, albeit to varying degrees.Footnote 20
This debate between two titans of US social science played out as labour rebellions swept the British Caribbean between 1934 and 1939, launching a new wave of Caribbean-based studies tethered to an agenda of late-colonial reform. The Royal Commission sent to investigate the causes of unrest focused overwhelmingly on the working-class African-Caribbean household, recommending interventionist welfare programmes and a vigorous campaign against ‘the social, moral and economic evils of promiscuity’.Footnote 21 In the wake of rebellion, the Colonial Office sought to abate these perceived impediments to progress through the West Indies Development and Welfare Organisation and, later, a massive social scientific study, the West Indies Social Survey (WISS).Footnote 22 Studies such as Thomas Simey's Welfare and Planning in the West Indies (1946) and Edith Clarke's My Mother Who Fathered Me (1957) resulted from this marriage of social science and social policy.Footnote 23 Simey, a British sociologist and social welfare advisor in the West Indies between 1941 and 1944, and Clarke, a British-educated Jamaican anthropologist from a prominent plantation-owning family, embraced Frazier's theory that ‘matricentric’ households adapted to the economically weak position of men while producing other social maladaptions, a conclusion shaped not least by the close contact that these researchers maintained with the US sociologist.Footnote 24 At the same time, Clarke – like other anthropologists informed by structural functionalist approaches – sought to understand the working-class Jamaican family as fulfilling certain functions that ‘embodied its own order, principles and structures’.Footnote 25 Despite this, researchers understood the ‘West Indian family’ largely by analogy, assuming proper family life involved a coresidential conjugal couple and prescribed gender roles.Footnote 26
Projects like the WISS were initially intended to revitalise the colonial project in the Caribbean. But, with growing demands for independence and accelerating migration to Europe, the Black family studies programme was henceforth remade into a project of metropolitan assimilation.Footnote 27 In Britain, social scientists with experience in the West Indies, such as Thomas Simey and Kenneth Little, a physical anthropologist appointed to serve on the supervisory committee of the WISS, helped to establish the study of ‘race relations’, a research programme that garnered significant state support and continued collaboration with US researchers like Frazier.Footnote 28 Like their British and US counterparts, French officials once again turned toward the social scientific study of African-Antillean family life as the overseas departments (départements d'outré mer, DOM) integrated into France in 1946. Authorities viewed studies like Frazier's as a cautionary tale applicable to a distinct Caribbean context: social policy, they argued, should help to instil reverence for French family values and paternal duty among Antillean men so that children would not grow up without fathers and perpetuate cycles of criminality and poverty.Footnote 29
In the Dutch Caribbean, the zeitgeist of decolonisation also resulted in increased social scientific knowledge production. In 1953, one year before a new constitutional order proclaimed Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles as constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the Dutch parliament ratified the creation of the Foundation for the Advancement of Research in Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles (Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek Suriname – Nederlandse Antillen, WOSUNA). This state-funded initiative to encourage scientific research in the Caribbean was believed vital to the postcolonial development project.Footnote 30 Within a decade of its creation, WOSUNA and its successor organisation, the Netherlands Foundation for the Advancement of Tropical Research (Nederlandse Stichting voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek van de Tropen, WOTRO), called for research on family ‘adaptation’ as unemployment soared alongside racialised anxieties about overpopulation.Footnote 31 Influential studies resulted from this push, including Willem F. L. Buschkens’ The Family System of the Paramaribo Creoles, A. F. Marks’ Male and Female in the Afro-Curaçaoan Household and Eva Abraham-van der Mark's Yu'i Mama (Mother's Child), each of which meditated extensively on the origins and contour of the ‘Afro-American’ family while exploring local specificities in view of economic trends.Footnote 32 Like other sociologists and anthropologists working in the region, concern with Black kinship often reflected late- and post-colonial concerns that bleak economic prospects would prevent men from fulfilling their supposedly natural roles as heads of household, husbands, fathers and, by extension, national leaders.Footnote 33
These examples illustrate how the study of working-class Black family life, often publicly subsidised, emerged alongside shifting social, political and economic goals ultimately to produce the Black family ‘as an object of knowledge and a problem of national security’.Footnote 34 Transnational from the start, expert exchanges contributed, as Barbara Bush has written, ‘to an emergent transnational discourse of family dysfunction in the African diaspora in the Americas’ that powerfully influenced government policies.Footnote 35 This is perhaps nowhere more controversially rendered than in the ‘Moynihan Report’ of 1965, in which sociologist and Assistant Secretary of Labour Daniel Patrick Moynihan elaborated on existing assumptions in Black kinship studies: that matrifocal families constituted a ‘tangle of pathology’, perpetuating male marginality, youth delinquency and poverty across generations.Footnote 36 Although this report represents a significant inflection point on debates on race and welfare in the United States, neither Moynihan's arguments nor his trajectory from a defender of Great Society programmes to a resolute critic of the welfare state were exceptional.Footnote 37 Returning to the circulation of Black kinship studies in decolonisation-era Europe brings into focus a similar evolution of social science and social policy.
Finding the Family in the Welfare State
Long a mainstay of Caribbean livelihoods, it was in the 1970s that migration from the Dutch Caribbean turned in the direction of the metropole. Renowned European Dutch anthropologist André Köbben, a professor at the University of Amsterdam who supervised, among others, Eva Abraham-van der Mark's dissertation on working-class Afro-Curaçaoan families, recognised before authorities did that migration from kingdom territories would likely be significant and long-lasting. In 1970, the cultural anthropologist appealed for funding from WOTRO to investigate whether Caribbean migration to the Netherlands altered perspectives on family life, believing this to be a potent metric of assimilation.Footnote 38 At the same time, Köbben collaborated with the municipal social service department in Amsterdam – home to the largest number of overseas nationals in the 1970s – to enlist social scientists in reviewing the department's case files.Footnote 39 City bureaucrats hoped to leverage the partnership to assess the unique needs of Caribbean Dutch citizens who were not otherwise distinguished in administrative records.
Pleas for enhanced knowledge emerged as the Netherlands experienced growing postcolonial and guest worker migration. Family reunification policies enabled spouses and children to join former guest workers from Turkey and Morocco. But migration from the Caribbean colonies differed in one crucial respect. For much of the decade, families from Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles entered the country not as foreign nationals but as Dutch citizens.Footnote 40 The expansion of Dutch citizenship to the Caribbean dated to decolonisation-era reforms implemented in 1948 – when Dutch subjects in the Caribbean became Dutch citizens – and 1954, when a new constitutional order turned Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles into internally self-governing member states of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and protected freedom of movement between the kingdom's Caribbean and European theatres.Footnote 41
By the end of the 1960s, this commonwealth arrangement drew criticisms on both sides of the Atlantic. In 1969, a strike at Curaçao's Shell-owned oil refinery expanded into an outpouring of discontent with abiding racial inequality and colonial attitudes. Local police on Curaçao requested the ‘mutual support’ promised in the kingdom's constitution by summoning the Dutch marines to subdue the uprising. Though dissatisfaction with racial and economic inequality was widespread, demands for complete independence were unevenly shared. In the Netherlands, however, European Dutch progressives rued their obligation to deploy what could be perceived as ‘colonial force’ and insisted that the transatlantic kingdom dissolve according to nation-state models.Footnote 42 In 1973, the newly elected cabinet of Dutch Prime Minister and Labour Party leader Joop den Uyl announced that it would initiate talks with Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles about a transfer of sovereignty. European Dutch politicians did not just believe that independence aligned with anti-imperialist principles but many also hoped that the transfer of sovereignty would stem potential migration from the Caribbean to Europe.Footnote 43
This attempt to confine Dutch citizenship to the European continent produced the opposite intended result. In Suriname, some politicians welcomed sovereignty and announced in 1974 that the country would achieve independence by the end of the following year. The decision had never been put to a vote and, by 1980, one-half of Suriname's population – over 160,000 people – left to claim citizenship in the Netherlands. Dutch citizens in the Netherlands Antilles watched sceptically as sovereignty resulted first in the exodus of Suriname's population and, by 1980, in the violent consolidation of a military dictatorship.Footnote 44 Concerns about the eventual loss of citizenship and worsening economic circumstances on the most populous islands of Curaçao and Aruba accelerated migration to Europe in the 1970s, which saw a rise in the migration of people from the most vulnerable socio-economic circumstances. Family rather than individual migration brought with it a concomitant increase in migrating women, who outnumbered men after 1973. Emigration from the Netherlands Antillean islands reached its own exodus level in 1985 after the shuttering and sale of two mammoth oil refineries on Aruba and Curaçao. From 1984 to 1999, the number of Dutch citizens from the Caribbean islands living in the Netherlands – the vast majority of them from CuraçaoFootnote 45 – tripled to nearly 106,000, one-third of the total population of the Netherlands Antilles.Footnote 46 Though significant in terms of the population of the Netherlands Antilles, the number of Dutch citizens from the islands constituted a small percentage of the total population of the Netherlands, a fact obscured by the outsized and often negative attention this group received.Footnote 47 However embattled, the right of Dutch citizenship, as Guno Jones and Michael O. Sharpe have argued, remained a critical protection in an unequal multinational state shaped by colonial exploitation.Footnote 48
As growing numbers of Caribbean Dutch citizens settled in Amsterdam in the 1970s, the municipality collaborated with researchers at the Anthropological and Sociological Centre of the University of Amsterdam to index interactions between Caribbean-born Dutch citizens and welfare providers. In the 1970s, Den Uyl's cabinet expanded social policies and modest social welfare measures for migrant groups, but the assumption remained that the Netherlands should not become a ‘country of immigration’ and that migrant welfare should be encouraged, with the aim of incentivising return migration.Footnote 49 While the Dutch citizenship of people from Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles facilitated access to certain rights, municipal bureaucrats argued that the common citizenship prevented public servants from assessing the ostensibly unique needs of Caribbean families. Civil servants in Amsterdam repeatedly bemoaned that among the perceived problems resulting from Caribbean migration, ‘the most important is that Surinamese and Antilleans are, rightly, not separately registered in the Regional Labour Office or the Municipal Housing Services, nor in municipal social service departments or schools’.Footnote 50
These efforts to track Caribbean families emerged at the start of the 1970s in connection with the Social Assistance Act (Algemene Bijstandswet; ABW). Established in 1965, the ABW transformed the Dutch welfare state by entrusting the provision of social assistance to the government and not, as was previously done, to religious and other charitable organisations. This social insurance legislation was initially intended to strengthen the financial position of the nuclear family by offering the presumed male breadwinner financial assistance in the event of unemployment. But the implementation of the ABW instead undermined the importance of marriage by extending economic security to single women, a phenomenon accelerated by the relaxation of divorce law six years later.Footnote 51 Under the ABW's social insurance provisions, single parents with dependent children under the age of sixteen were entitled to 87.5 per cent of the minimum income.Footnote 52
Responsible at the national level for the welfare of ‘postcolonial’ migrants from Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles, the Ministry of Culture, Recreation and Social Work (Ministerie van Cultuur, Recreatie en Maatschappelijk Werk, CRM) requested detailed information in 1971 about ‘the extent to which migrating kingdom partners appeal to the ABW’.Footnote 53 The social service departments of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht were asked to participate in the study, though only Amsterdam was able to marshall the resources to employ an academic researcher to review the department's case files.Footnote 54 Circulated internally in 1972, the report identified the ‘family situation’ of overseas nationals as the most important predictor of demands on social services.Footnote 55 According to Amsterdam's social services department, at least half of the Caribbean-born clients seeking relief through the ABW were comprised of ‘female heads of household’. This constituency also formed the largest group of clients not registered for unemployment assistance, a wage-related benefit that offered recently unemployed people financial provisions for a period of six months to two years.Footnote 56 The caretaking duties of single mothers, the report contended, prevented their entry into the workforce and caused ‘structural’ dependence on welfare.Footnote 57
Intended to provide a portrait of migrant welfare that could facilitate economic participation and eventual return migration, European Dutch authorities in this decade of increased movement conceived of single motherhood as a problem of welfare reliance. Furthermore, they identified single motherhood as the essential framework by which Caribbean Dutch citizens, otherwise indistinguishable from European Dutch in official records, could be defined and made legible in administrative accounting.
Kin and Categories as ‘Racial Ontology’
The growing recognition by the end of the 1970s that the Netherlands would be a permanent rather than a temporary home to migrants spurred state investment in research on so-called ‘ethnic minorities’ and resulted in an unusually close relationship between social science and state policy.Footnote 58 Under the auspices of the Ministry CRM, the Dutch government became the primary sponsor of social scientific research on migrant groups. Created in 1965, the ministry was initially tasked with reorienting European Dutch families to urban and industrialised societies through the expansion of social work and nationally-organised social insurance legislation. In the next decade, the ministry would extend these approaches to the management of non-European Dutch populations. Informally advised by social scientific experts since 1976, the ministry formalised the connection between policy development and expertise in 1978 through the establishment of the Advisory Committee on Minorities Research (Adviescommissie Onderzoek Culturele Minderheden, ACOM) under the chairship of anthropologist André Köbben, who brought to the position an existing interest in African diasporic kinship.Footnote 59 The ministry held a monopoly position in determining what research would receive state funding.Footnote 60 Starting in 1981, the government earmarked the equivalent of 28 million euros annually for research on people with a migration background. After 1984, Dutch authorities mandated that publicly funded research should be relevant to policy formation.Footnote 61 With simultaneous spending cutbacks at national universities, academic researchers grew further reliant on state funding and tailored their research programmes to the priorities of the Dutch government. From 1980–5, the government funded nearly 800 studies on migrant groups, virtually doubling a bibliography produced in 1978 that documented 350 government-sponsored studies since the Second World War.Footnote 62
If Caribbean-born Dutch citizens were ultimately disaggregated from their European-born counterparts in these studies, they were not always considered apart from each other. For social scientists, it was precisely the perceived similarities in family structures that cohered ‘ethnic’ groups. The authors of Surinamese and Antilleans in Amsterdam (1979) commissioned by the Ministry CRM contended that the key differences between Surinamese, Antillean and ‘other Dutch’ families lay in the ‘composition of families and households’. Even on this terrain, the report argued, there was a ‘big difference between Creoles and Hindustanis’, referring to the sizeable population of Surinamese of South Asian ancestry, who also moved to the Netherlands but featured less frequently as objects of state concern.Footnote 63 Though the term ‘Creole’ was not used to describe people of African descent in the Netherlands Antilles as it was in Suriname, the authors nevertheless slotted islanders into this deracinated category and argued that ‘Antilleans belong almost exclusively to the Creole population group’. Warranting their inclusion in this designation was the alleged ubiquity of single motherhood: ‘It is generally accepted in Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles that a Creole woman is the head of the household.’Footnote 64
Just as people from the Netherlands Antilles and Suriname were increasingly collapsed together on the basis of kinship and race, so, too, were differences among the Antillean islands effaced, with people from Curaçao and Aruba (as well as Bonaire, St. Maarten, Saba and St. Eustatius, who moved to the Netherlands in much smaller numbers) corralled into a category long accused of reflecting administrative convenience rather than meaningful cultural unity.Footnote 65 A small cohort of care providers with a Caribbean background asserted that such categorisations impacted the everyday experience of racialisation for Caribbean Dutch citizens in the Netherlands. In addition to racist discrimination in housing and employment in cities like Amsterdam, where authorities in 1978 reluctantly admitted before an audience of Caribbean Dutch protesters that they deliberately limited the number of non-European families in public housing, differing notions of race in Europe could clash with one's self-understanding.Footnote 66 At a 1988 workshop for care providers in The Hague, Mary Aitatus touched on the long-standing but in the Netherlands lesser known history of racialised nationalism that divided Aruba, reductively imagined by many as a ‘mestizo’ island, and the majority Black island of Curaçao:Footnote 67 ‘Among my own colleagues, it was unknown that “light-skinned” people, especially Arubans, understand themselves as “white”.’ Aitatus alleged that, in order to effectively administer care, European Dutch welfare providers needed to better understand Caribbean modes of self-fashioning before imposing their own understandings.Footnote 68
The state's enlistment of sociologists and anthropologists for research on Caribbean communities in the Netherlands proved particularly consequential, resulting in a near constant obsession with the concept of the matrifocal household that had deep roots in both disciplinary traditions. While an earlier generation of researchers devoted entire books to defining ‘matrifocality’, researchers commissioned by Amsterdam and the Ministry CRM explored these distinctions but ultimately embraced the term to describe households where the biological mother was not coresident with the biological father.Footnote 69 One consequential debate that was reanimated, however, was that between Herskovits and Frazier. European Dutch researchers found in these theories tools for anticipating future demands on social assistance. If economic circumstances determined family forms, as Frazier contended, then professional and educational success may result in higher numbers of dual-earning, cohabitating couples. In a report commissioned by the city of Amsterdam, the University of Amsterdam-trained sociologist Ineke Gooskens predicted in the 1970s that economic prosperity in the Netherlands would witness the rise in ‘legal relationships’ among ‘Creole’ populations in the Netherlands.Footnote 70 With funding from the newly renamed Ministry of Welfare, Public Health and Culture (Ministerie van Welzijn, Volksgezondheid en Cultuur, WVC, until 1982 CRM), researchers like Maria Lenders and Marjolein van Vlijman-van de Rhoer instead maintained in the 1980s that cultural patterns would override economics and lead to the endurance of single motherhood in the Netherlands.Footnote 71 Such predictions were not left to speculation. As internal movements across the kingdom continued into the 1980s, demographers housed at the Central Bureau for Statistics (CBS) tracked marriage rates and fertility levels among Dutch citizens of Caribbean origin. The annual reports published by the CBS and other demographic institutes continued to separate Caribbean-born Dutch citizens and their descendants from their European-born counterparts over three generations.Footnote 72
This redeployment of racial knowledge was attended by efforts to fix and typologise the seemingly diverse ways that Caribbean women organised their romantic lives. This approach, too, drew from earlier anthropological studies in the Caribbean. As Christine Barrow has written, anthropological research conducted in the early twentieth century strove to classify family forms by conjugal union type and household composition – a schema that framed the Caribbean family as fundamentally heterosexual.Footnote 73 European Dutch researchers employed these same frameworks to organise information about Caribbean Dutch welfare clients. They were particularly interested in identifying the prevalence of ‘concubinage’, defined as a nonmarital cohabiting relationship of varying length, or the ‘visiting relationship’, a nonmonogamous sexual relationship of short duration that did not involve cohabitation of the couple. The Dutch welfare state deemed these taxonomies important for its effective administration. In 1979, sociologists employed by Amsterdam's Department of Social Services made a case for correct classification:
Because only legal relationships are registered, concubines without children are, for example, registered as two single people, while a concubine relationship with kids is registered as a single-parent household with an additional single resident. Illegitimate children and foster children are not registered as children living at home, but as singles.Footnote 74
Civil servants reasoned that this categorical confusion might entitle some to claim or be denied benefits based on the incorrect registration of household relationships.
The Dutch welfare state encountered supposedly anomalous forms of Caribbean conjugality at precisely the moment when sexual and family norms were radically contested within mainstream European Dutch society. This was not lost on some contemporaries. Researcher R. A. de Moor's (1985) volume Marriage and Family: What Is Their Future in Western Europe? contended that growing acceptance of nonmarital, nonreproductive intimacies in the aftermath of the sexual revolution would lead to increased tolerance of immigrants and their equally varied romantic lives.Footnote 75 Even the 1979 report by Amsterdam's Department of Social Services proposed a ‘new definition of family’ in view of social transformations that have diminished ‘the differences in family composition between Surinamese and indigenous Dutch people’.Footnote 76 Yet these seemingly progressive invitations to redefine the family would eventually become disentangled from public obligation altogether.
In the 1980s, critiques that had begun to develop in the previous decade about expansive social policies now found concrete expression. Under the premiership of Christian Democrat Ruud Lubbers, issues once regarded as national responsibilities (including family housing and health care) came to be formulated as private initiatives.Footnote 77 In 1987, a major social security reform was implemented in order to increase labour market participation. The duration of unemployment benefits henceforth became contingent on the work history of recipients. With criticism of public spending continuing into the next decade, in 1993 the Dutch parliament launched an enquiry into social security that would result in the overhaul of core programmes like the ABW, a subject revisited in this paper's conclusion.Footnote 78 Parenthood thus came to be regarded as an individual choice and an individual responsibility. As Sarah van Walsum has pointed out, from the 1980s on, the Dutch state ‘reconcile[d] individual rights to sexual freedom with the public task of controlling economic interdependency by disassociating the one from the other’.Footnote 79
Knowledge and the Defence of Welfare
Far from evoking broad social consensus, anticipated changes to the welfare state were met with opposition within Caribbean Dutch communities in the Netherlands. Quite crucially, activist groups organised under the banner of ‘categorical work’ – a Dutch approach to multiculturalism that subsidised various social welfare groups for each ‘category’ of migrants in the Netherlands – criticised the funnelling of resources toward research on migrant groups.Footnote 80 The reasons for funding categorical organisations varied over time. In the 1970s, authorities believed the maintenance of cultural identities was crucial to eventual return migration. In 1983, the Dutch government issued its first Memorandum on Minorities (Minderhedennota) which recognised that immigrants would remain permanently in the Netherlands as ‘ethnic minorities’.Footnote 81 By 1987, with growing political ambivalence about ‘ethnic minorities’ policy and pervasive public spending cutbacks, funding for categorical organisations disappeared.Footnote 82 Prime Minister Lubbers announced in a radio interview in 1990 a new approach to ‘minority policy’ fully in line with austerity politics yet terribly dissonant with the lived realities of ‘ethnic minorities’ themselves: ‘the State should stop pampering minorities, and . . . minorities should assume their own responsibility’.Footnote 83 Despite criticisms of government policy and knowledge production during these years of retrenchment, categorical groups did not dispense with the importance of knowledge production altogether. Instead, they insisted that expertise be redefined to allow migrants themselves to serve as experts and to fund research on racism in Dutch society.
Activists persistently criticised state authorities for focusing on perceived ‘problems’ within Caribbean communities without interrogating the historical origins of inequality. These concerns were already pronounced at the start of the 1970s. In 1971, Dutch companies abruptly ended recruitment drives in Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles due in part to growing moral panic surrounding Caribbean labourers in the Netherlands.Footnote 84 As early as 1962, the deputy prime minister of the Netherlands called for the limiting of Caribbean labour migration, even exploring legal options to restrict the right of abode in the Netherlands.Footnote 85 In a government working group convened to explore the living conditions of Antillean labourers in 1967, some officials made the case that the primary obstacles blocking Antillean assimilation in Europe ‘lie on the terrain of sex, including sex education and education about marriage’.Footnote 86 Another official lambasted the population of ‘failed students’ from the Caribbean territories whose Dutch citizenship prevented these ‘asocials and delinquents’ from being returned to their home countries. This same official alleged that, once in the Netherlands, women from the Caribbean frequently abandoned jobs in the health sector in order to sell commercial sex.Footnote 87
In view of these damaging representations, the National Foundation for Antillean Welfare (Landelijke Stichting Welzijn Antillianen, LSWA) argued that greater emphasis should be given to the difficulties Caribbean Dutch people encountered in Europe, including racial discrimination. As one LSWA worker wrote, ‘Only by studying the structural set-up (colonial situation) do the current conditions become abundantly clear’.Footnote 88 Activists in the 1970s and 1980s would further develop this argument, insisting that colonial history also explained the differential development of the Caribbean territories and the European Netherlands – an argument made both by earlier anticolonial critics and more recent racial justice activists advocating for a serious reckoning with the colonial history that has shaped the European Netherlands socially and economically.Footnote 89 The Platform of Antillean and Aruban Organisations (Plataforma di Organisashonan Antiano i Arubano, POA), formed in 1983 as an umbrella organisation for Antillean categorical groups, opined, ‘In part because of riches accumulated in the overseas territories, people in the Netherlands were in a position to develop robust collective provisions through which the less productive Dutch citizen could be insured and cared for by the state’.Footnote 90
A topic of recurrent criticism, state-funded research featured regularly in activist critique. Activists highlighted how publicly-funded research, myopically fixated on welfare, racialised and imperilled social assistance. In 1988, Moluccan scholar Julia de Lima argued that this overwhelming emphasis misplaced attention away from pressing issues of discrimination in the labour market and inadequate educational opportunities, contributing to assumptions that Surinamese, Dutch Antilleans and MoluccansFootnote 91 were simply ‘abusers’ profiting from the Dutch welfare state.Footnote 92 Originally published in Dutch in 1984, Philomena Essed's pathbreaking Everyday Racism offered a powerful framework for apprehending racism at a time when many Europeans insisted racial prejudice was no longer operative in Dutch society.Footnote 93 A Surinamese-Dutch sociologist, Essed, coined the concept of ‘everyday racism’ to describe the quotidian ways in which assumptions of white superiority and its entanglements with sexism surfaced in Euro-American societies, including in academic research and popular discourse that portrayed Black people as ‘people who refuse to adapt to Dutch culture while abusing the benefits of the Dutch welfare system’.Footnote 94 Chairman of the Association for Surinamese and Antillean Social Workers (Vereniging Surinaamse en Antilliaanse Welzijnwerk(st)ers: VSAW), Keith Carlo, lamented that these associations had even soured relations within the Caribbean Dutch community, with some Antilleans accusing the Surinamese of drawing ‘welfare vouchers’ and proclaiming that ‘they (Surinamers) have ruined it here for us (Antilleans)’. For Carlo, Caribbean Dutch communities urgently needed to militate against the divisions stoked by categorical policy and the competition for resources that it engendered, seeing in this a reprisal of colonial history itself.Footnote 95 Carlo's comments highlighted the ambivalent effects of European Dutch policy, at once homogenising and silo-ing diverse groups.
Not least because of the deleterious impact of knowledge production, activists proposed that researchers study racism in the Netherlands and not racialised minorities themselves. Under the headline ‘Research on minorities: In whose interest?’, the POA insisted that ‘ethnic groups are too often considered at a distance’ and that, despite claims to expertise, European Dutch researchers lacked sufficient familiarity with Caribbean experiences. Still, the POA maintained that white researchers and their traditional research subjects both had important roles to play in a progressive intellectual agenda. European Dutch researchers could be made useful by uncovering and eradicating institutional racism, a topic that was seldom addressed in state-funded research.Footnote 96 Key figures in what became known as ‘minorities studies’, including anthropologists and ACOM members André Köbben and Rinus Penninx, believed that researchers should feel a strong identification with the cause of immigrant ‘emancipation’.Footnote 97 Yet, while attentive to issues of ‘prejudice’ and instances of racial discrimination, scholars often rejected the existence and study of systemic racism, whether because of personal belief or the priorities of public funding bodies, where accepted research paradigms often ‘divorced the issue of how to achieve the integration of minorities from the larger issue of the transformation of society’.Footnote 98 For these reasons, activists challenged the state's definition of expertise, insisting on the importance of experiential knowledge while criticising the convenient delimiting of problems to include only those alleged to belong to migrant groups and not wider European Dutch society.
Some publicly-funded experts utilised their positions to meet the needs of Caribbean Dutch communities rather than the state or municipality that they served. Celebrated anthropologist Fridus Steijlen confronted these limitations while working on a Ministry WVC-funded project as a graduate student at the University of Amsterdam in the late 1980s. Like Steijlen, graduate students at Dutch universities studying anthropology and ‘non-Western sociology’ (a precursor to development sociology) often found short-term employment on research projects funded by the ministry or municipal social service departments. According to Steijlen, it soon became apparent that the 'subjects' of this research had distinct concerns from the public bodies funding it.Footnote 99 Contracted to explore juvenile delinquency among Curaçaoan teens in Amsterdam,Footnote 100 Steijlen utilised his expert capital to help a group of teenagers develop a proposal for a community centre named after Tula, the leader of a (1795) slave rebellion on Curaçao. Originating among Curaçaoan Dutch youth themselves, this idea fitted squarely within the tradition of ‘community development’ (opbouwwerk) endorsed by many liberal researchers and social workers of the era, and which was also transplanted from US experiments in welfare state building. In its US and European instantiations, ‘community development’ sought to encourage the participation of community members in their own social and economic betterment.Footnote 101 Despite liberal commitment to this programme of ‘self-help’, the municipality of Amsterdam rejected the proposal. Steijlen clarified that the title of his resulting 1988 report, ‘Missed Opportunities’, related not to the failure of Caribbean-born youth to integrate into Dutch society (this opportunity, he argued, had never been made meaningfully available to them), but to the shortsightedness of the municipal government to support their stated needs.Footnote 102
In part in response to activist and expert critique of knowledge production, the Ministry WVC saw an advantageous opportunity to enlist categorical organisations in research on single mothers, given the latter's proximity to the target demographic.Footnote 103 Far from refusing the ‘single mother’ as an object of state knowledge production, activist organisations like the POA instead argued that single mothers emblemised the struggle for emancipation in the Netherlands. With funding from the Ministry WVC, researchers partnered with categorical organisations to publish several studies on single motherhood. In 1990, POA collaborated with several researchers to write Mama Soltera, a book-length study of Antillean- and Aruban-born single mothers in the Netherlands. Unlike the first generation of Black kinship studies, activist organisations sought to convey ‘single motherhood’ not as an unwanted tragedy but rather as an important aspect of feminine identity and a desirable alternative to patriarchal relationships, from which, the authors noted, white European Dutch women were also increasingly seeking escape.Footnote 104
Yet, given the urgent goal of strengthening state supports for Caribbean Dutch families, there were necessary limits to this emancipatory portrayal of alternate family forms. In 1985, POA circulated a statement by an anonymous single mother with two growing children. Providing a snapshot of her daily budget, she asserted, ‘I spend practically nothing on entertainment, going out, etcetera. My expenses include primarily living essentials. I'm glad to receive a child stipend every quarter, but what a shame that, with all of these budget cuts, the government keeps reducing it’.Footnote 105 As the Dutch government reduced social spending in the 1980s, categorical organisations took up discussion of single mothers to remind the Dutch state and those who staffed its institutions that ‘a strong economic position is, without exception, necessary to achieve emancipation’.Footnote 106
Conclusion
Despite these appeals, in the early 1990s, the broad social insurance provisions of the ABW came under the scrutiny of the Dutch parliament. The Dutch government once again commissioned research examining social welfare and the ends to which it was used. In a 1992 report on Surinamese, Antillean, Aruban and Moluccan welfare clients, authors R. A. Wong and J. Arends concluded, ‘Antilleans form the migrant group with the most problems’.Footnote 107 Wong and Arends argued that Antillean 'problems' emerged from the changing demographic profile of Antillean arrivants after 1985, when mothers and their children formed over 80 per cent of those moving to the Netherlands. With popular and political discussion urging reform of the ABW to encourage labour participation and to reduce the fraudulent collection of social assistance, researchers studying welfare reliance now made new recommendations to assist these objectives. Wong and Arends recommended reducing financial payouts to single parents and enhancing childcare services and education on pregnancy prevention for Caribbean women.
In 1996, the ABW was overhauled in line with these recommendations. Single parents with children over age five would now be required to work in order to access assistance through the act. Assistance payments were decreased by roughly 20 per cent in order to incentivise parental participation in the labour market.Footnote 108 As Romke van der Veen and Willem Trommel have argued, such reforms to the Dutch welfare state stemmed from a paradigm shift in conceptions of individuals as rule-following social actors to manipulative and self-interested parties.Footnote 109 This article has insisted that, in order to understand this shift, we must also attend to the role of race in all its intersections with class and gender and sexual norms. Although Dutch debates did not play out in the same highly politicised way that they did in the United States, it was – as Merijn Oudenampsen has also observed – in the ‘depoliticised’ but no less ideologically-charged language of expertise that the economic rights of Caribbean Dutch citizens were called into question.Footnote 110
As this article has shown, European Dutch policy makers singled out Caribbean-born Dutch citizens, insisting that Caribbean cultural practices placed unique demands on social services. Researchers based this contention on a corpus of state-funded research undertaken throughout the 1970s and 1990s that explored the connection between single motherhood and welfare reliance. In their effort to explain the perceived correlation between these referents, researchers relied on assumptions about the similarities of Black people across space and time.
Two aspects of this research and its capacious geographic reach bear mentioning. The first is its disturbing constancy, which raises important questions about the development of racial formations (perpetually bound up with notions of gender, sexuality and class) across the Atlantic world. Showing how knowledge of Black families circulated across the United States and Caribbean to other European contexts heeds theorist David Theo Goldberg's call to study racial formations relationally rather than comparatively – to see the connections that informed notions of race across distant locales.Footnote 111 As Europeans dispensed with the vocabulary of race after the Second World War, the work of race was nevertheless accomplished through the creation of expertise on Black family life.Footnote 112 That racial difference centred in the Dutch case on kinship, allegedly unstable family forms and the cyclical production of poverty delivers a halting rejoinder to those who maintain the specificity of European racialisation. For, in the Netherlands, it was precisely the perceived similarities of Black people across space and time that warranted the transfer of racial knowledge – and ultimately with similar outcomes. This occurred even as many researchers believed they were undermining racism by challenging biological notions of difference. But, by emphasising individual behaviour in the resolution of social ills, social scientific knowledge presupposed the answers in the questions themselves, locating the ‘problem’ and its putative solution in the social realm of the family and not in the dismantling of systems of racial and economic inequality.Footnote 113 In this way, despite the varying intentions of individual researchers, knowledge of the ‘Black family’ came easily to serve revanchist agendas.
Second, from its colonial origins to its postcolonial afterlife, the production of knowledge was a policy-oriented project with a distinct ‘imperative of governance’.Footnote 114 The Black family studies programme that developed in the United States and the Caribbean was a tool of governance forged in the crucible of post-slavery societies experiencing population movements and widespread activism and uprisings. As Black and Caribbean feminist scholars have noted, this first wave of scholarship viewed pejoratively any conjugal practices that diverged from the model of the white Western nuclear family.Footnote 115 Research undertaken on Black kinship was thus overwhelmingly geared toward ‘resolving’ these perceived deficiencies to pursue broader social objectives. In the Dutch case, research on Black families also evolved in step with state prerogatives. In the 1960s, knowledge of kinship practices was sought to aid ‘development’ in the Caribbean territories of the kingdom, a programme shaped by a legacy of racial slavery that identified road blocks to modernisation in Black sexual and reproductive practices.Footnote 116 With increased migration and looming Caribbean independence in the 1970s, studies of Black kinship were now put in service of metropolitan institutions, with social scientists once again identifying the family situation as an obstacle toward achieving economic integration in the Netherlands. By the 1980s and 1990s, despite opposition from Caribbean Dutch groups and some experts, studies of Black kinship were more often used to allege that the unchanging ‘cultural’ qualities of Black families would render social welfare inefficient in resolving inequality. Decolonisation thus did not break this tight bond between social science and social policy. Instead, the field of Black kinship studies was to serve a new end: the remaking of the welfare state after empire.
Acknowledgements
For their constructive feedback and generous engagement, I thank the editors and three anonymous reviewers of Contemporary European History, Wigbertson Julian Isenia and audiences at the University of Wisconsin, Madison; the German Historical Institute in Washington, DC and Berkeley, California; Universiteit Utrecht and the Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies/KITLV. A fellowship at the German Historical Institute in Washington, DC supported the research on which this article is partially based.