Between Precarity and Paternalism: Farm Workers and Trade Unions in South Africa's Western Cape Province

The labour market in rural areas of South Africa’s Western Cape province has undergone considerable changes over the last thirty years. New labour and tenure legislation protecting farm workers combined with trade liberalisation, the abolition of subsidies and in-migration from other areas of South...

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Main Author: Christopher Webb
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: McMaster University Library Press 2017-01-01
Series:Global Labour Journal
Online Access:https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/article/view/2842
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spelling doaj-264819aee4064112b10a86083005ae242021-04-02T19:27:10ZengMcMaster University Library PressGlobal Labour Journal1918-67112017-01-018110.15173/glj.v8i1.2842Between Precarity and Paternalism: Farm Workers and Trade Unions in South Africa's Western Cape ProvinceChristopher Webb0University of Toronto, Department of Geography and Planning The labour market in rural areas of South Africa’s Western Cape province has undergone considerable changes over the last thirty years. New labour and tenure legislation protecting farm workers combined with trade liberalisation, the abolition of subsidies and in-migration from other areas of South Africa has significantly reshaped labour on commercial farms. There is an increasing divide between permanent farm workers and a growing pool of precariously employed workers who labour seasonally on farms and are frequently employed through labour brokers. These divisions came to a head in 2012 when workers, many of whom work seasonally on farms, launched a strike that was to last for six months. Trade unions have struggled to organise an increasingly fragmented rural labour market and at the same time negotiate the forms of paternalism that continue to exert a strong influence over rural labour relations. Based on interviews with trade union organisers, this article examines how they have responded to the twin challenges of labour broking and paternalism. The farm strikes highlight the need for a form of social movement unionism that goes beyond wage demands and tackles the multiple factors that influence poverty in rural areas. https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/article/view/2842
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher Webb
spellingShingle Christopher Webb
Between Precarity and Paternalism: Farm Workers and Trade Unions in South Africa's Western Cape Province
Global Labour Journal
author_facet Christopher Webb
author_sort Christopher Webb
title Between Precarity and Paternalism: Farm Workers and Trade Unions in South Africa's Western Cape Province
title_short Between Precarity and Paternalism: Farm Workers and Trade Unions in South Africa's Western Cape Province
title_full Between Precarity and Paternalism: Farm Workers and Trade Unions in South Africa's Western Cape Province
title_fullStr Between Precarity and Paternalism: Farm Workers and Trade Unions in South Africa's Western Cape Province
title_full_unstemmed Between Precarity and Paternalism: Farm Workers and Trade Unions in South Africa's Western Cape Province
title_sort between precarity and paternalism: farm workers and trade unions in south africa's western cape province
publisher McMaster University Library Press
series Global Labour Journal
issn 1918-6711
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The labour market in rural areas of South Africa’s Western Cape province has undergone considerable changes over the last thirty years. New labour and tenure legislation protecting farm workers combined with trade liberalisation, the abolition of subsidies and in-migration from other areas of South Africa has significantly reshaped labour on commercial farms. There is an increasing divide between permanent farm workers and a growing pool of precariously employed workers who labour seasonally on farms and are frequently employed through labour brokers. These divisions came to a head in 2012 when workers, many of whom work seasonally on farms, launched a strike that was to last for six months. Trade unions have struggled to organise an increasingly fragmented rural labour market and at the same time negotiate the forms of paternalism that continue to exert a strong influence over rural labour relations. Based on interviews with trade union organisers, this article examines how they have responded to the twin challenges of labour broking and paternalism. The farm strikes highlight the need for a form of social movement unionism that goes beyond wage demands and tackles the multiple factors that influence poverty in rural areas.
url https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/article/view/2842
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