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Humanities
- History
Today, coffee is the world’ second most valuable legal commodity and the most widely consumed
psychoactive drug. It also provides a livelihood to 20 million workers in 70 countries. Much has been
written about the history of coffee, from its discovery in Abyssinia to the ubiquity of Starbucks. The
impact of the introduction of colonial coffee production on labour relations is however a highly
understudied field. This project will contribute to the development of a new perspective on the
transformation of colonial labour systems, by focusing on the interaction between colonial
production systems and local rural societies.
The project explores two coffee frontiers in two different continents in the period 1870-1960.
In response to the ascendency of coffee as a mass commodity, new zones of coffee cultivation
emerged in Asia and Africa. Two of these zones, the North-West (Equateur) of Belgian Congo and
Java and West Sumatra in the Netherlands Indies, will be studied by a single set of research
questions. They focus on a/ the interaction between large scale (plantations) and small scale
(smallholders) production systems, b/ the mobilisation and employment of labour and c/ the
strategies of rural populations to keep control over their resources. This comparative project will
provide new insights into the way labour relations changed in different parts of the world in the
times of ‘igh colonialism’in response to the pressures and incentives of the global commodity
market.