Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
The elaborate “remaking” of the African working class that took off in earnest in the period after 1945 has only recently begun to receive the attention of scholars working on African labor and working-class history. This process of remaking, as in nineteenth-century England, essentially involved the incorporation of the African working class into a system of industrial relations which would guarantee it a stake in society with regard to jobs, wages, housing, and general working conditions.
An earlier version of this paper was presented at the American Historical Association annual meeting (Chicago, 1995). My thanks to Aisha Ibrahim and Mike West for comments and suggestions.
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