Comparative aspects of farm labour in twentieth century Botswana
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Date
2007Author
Morapedi, W.G.
Publisher
Routledge (Taylor and Francis) www.routledge.comType
Published ArticleMetadata
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This article focuses mainly on the Tuli block and Ghanzi farming areas because they were and still are the most economically viable. The aim of this article is to draw a comparison between the labour situation in
Ghanzi and the Tuli Block farms during the protectorate years, specifically from
1930 to 1966. These two areas lie in two extreme ends of Botswana. The
Ghanzi farms lie in the dry highlands of western Botswana, close to Namibia.
In the 1930s and early 1940s Ghanzi was a peripheral area, having little contact
with the rest of the country and the settler economy being largely subsistence. The Tuli Block is in the valley bushveld of eastern Botswana close to the
Transvaal (now Limpopo province).By the 1930s and 1940s, this area had
already adopted commercial farming. It is interesting to compare these two
areas because while one would expect many similarities under British protection,
the contextual variations that existed also created divergences that invite comparisons.
Whites (predominantly Afrikaners) from South Africa owned the farms in
both areas, but there were different regional variations, different ecological
zones and ethnic workforces that make an interesting comparison. These key
aspects of the farming areas and their implications will become clear as the
study unfolds. Another interesting comparison is between the different ethnicities
that provided labour within the Ghanzi farms.