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dc.contributor.authorMalila, Ikanyeng Stonto
dc.contributor.authorMakgala, Christian John
dc.date.accessioned2017-08-18T13:25:42Z
dc.date.available2017-08-18T13:25:42Z
dc.date.issued2016-08-31
dc.identifier.otherhttp://journals.ub.bw/index.php/bnr/article/view/626en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10311/1732
dc.description.abstractThe role of law as an instrument of colonial rule in sub-Saharan Africa seems to have received inadequate attention in the historiography while on the other hand, the extraction of African labour has received signifi cant coverage. This has meant that the relationship between punishment and labour has rarely been thoroughly investigated. Under colonial rule transplanted law was the constitutive law of the state. But amongst the panoply of laws used to facilitate colonial control over African territories, it was criminal law that was more directly employed in the colonial enterprise for purposes of social, political and economic control. This paper discusses how criminal law was used to facilitate labour extraction in colonial Botswana, which served as a labour reserve for the South African economy for much of the twentieth century.en_US
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dc.language.isofren_US
dc.publisherBotswana Notes and Records, http://journals.ub.bw/index.php/bnren_US
dc.relationhttp://journals.ub.bw/index.php/bnr/article/view/626/332en_US
dc.rightsCopyright (c) 2016 Botswana Notes and Recordsen_US
dc.sourceBotswana Notes and Records; Vol. 47en_US
dc.subjectExtraction of labouren_US
dc.subjectColonial Botswanaen_US
dc.subjectpunishmenten_US
dc.titlePunishment and the extraction of labour in colonial Botswanaen_US


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