The leading question in this research is how sir Granville St John Orde Browne imagined the ideal colonial labourer in correspondence and reports written in the course of his career, 1885-1945. It...Show moreThe leading question in this research is how sir Granville St John Orde Browne imagined the ideal colonial labourer in correspondence and reports written in the course of his career, 1885-1945. It asks specifically how men and women were represented or omitted within this imagining and why. It is argued that in the context of colonial labour, Orde Browne imagined the ideal colonial labourer as male and hereby excluded women from the realm of wage labour opportunities, instead discursively assigning them to the sphere of domesticity and recommending policies that limited female wage labour opportunities and reified a colonial idealization of wife-hood and motherhood. This exclusion was based on assumptions of women as especially traditional and conservative, a sexualization and associated demoralization of the independent presence of women in the compounds, and women being deemed inferior labourers. Men, on the other hand, were represented as objects of exploitation, whose bodies and minds were to be controlled through colonial policies with the aim of making labour migration as efficient and profitable as possible. Women within this structure were visualized as dependents who could either hinder said effective exploitation through the spread of disease and immorality, or could enable even more efficient and stable exploitation and ensure the reproduction of a future generation of workers.Show less
Bachelor thesis | Afrikaanse talen en culturen (BA)
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De strijd van Poqo tegen het apartheidsregime in Zuid-Afrika. Wat voor soort strijd werd er gevoerd en wat was het uiteindelijke doel van deze gewelddadige beweging?
This paper analyses the underwater timber salvation project that will remove timber from submerged forests in the Volta Lake. It will frame this by evaluating how the project can enhance...Show moreThis paper analyses the underwater timber salvation project that will remove timber from submerged forests in the Volta Lake. It will frame this by evaluating how the project can enhance development for Ghana. Kwame Nkrumah’s Volta River Project is primarily assessed as this led to the flooding of the Volta Lake. Nkrumah’s aspirations for Ghana at its independence set the scene for the course of development taken over the last 60 years. Later chapters discuss the underwater timber logging project and the far-reaching impacts it has on Ghana’s sustainable development. Issues such as illegal fishing and logging, deforestation and the Government of Ghana’s protocol for development are analysed. These chapters investigate the implications of the underwater timber harvest on the environment and local communities, special emphasis is placed on discussing the potential of this project to improve inland water transportation on the Volta Lake. Finally some recommendations are made in an attempt to enhance further sustainable development in Ghana. These recommendations are directed towards the Government of Ghana, the underwater timber salvation company and wider subsidiaries involved in increasing safety on the Volta Lake.Show less