Artigo Revisado por pares

Labour Emigration among the Moçambique Thonga: Cultural and Political Factors

1959; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 29; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/1157499

ISSN

1750-0184

Autores

Marvin Harris,

Tópico(s)

African history and culture studies

Resumo

Opening Paragraph Thonga migrant labour has played a strategic role in the development of the Union of South Africa's economy, especially its mining industry. In 1954 there was a known total of 173,433 Moçambique labourers at work in the Union. Of these, 110,716 were employed in the mines, while 62,717 were employed in other industries and services ( Anuário Estatistica , 1955, p. 131). This army of workers is drawn almost entirely from the region of Moçambique south of parallel 22° S., from among the Tonga-Shangaan peoples and the ethno-linguistically related Chope, Lenge, and Tonga of Inhambane. Although many of the motives and consequences of the Thonga emigration are shared by the migratory streams which emanate from other areas of Southern Africa and flow to the industrial heart of the Union, there are a number of circumstances connected with the movement of the Thonga which are not duplicated elsewhere.

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