Labour and Tin Mining in Malaya
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Implementation of the Cultuurstelsel in Java: Cases in Afdeeling Demak and Grobogan, Central Java Versus in Afdeeling Pacitan, East Java 1830-1870
The Implementation of the Cultuurstelsel in Java: Cases in Afdeeling Demak and Grobogan, Central Java versus in Afdeeling Pacitan, East Java 1830-1870 Iswahyudi Faculty of Languages and Arts, Universitas Negeri Yogyakarta, Indonesia Email: [email protected] Abstract: The Dutch colonial government in applying the Cultuurstelsel policy in Java in 1830 used traditional Javanese patterns of power to persuade farmers in certain regions to be willing to work in export plantations and surrender a portion of their land to be planted with governorate crops. Based on the description above, it would be interesting to see further about the implementation of the cultivation system in several afdeeling areas or regencies in Java because in Pacitan, East Java, it is said to have an impact on prosperity and welfare for farmers. On the other hand, in other regions, in Afdeeling Demak and Grobogan, Central Java, the opposite happened, namely that the implementation of the forced cultivation system actually had an impact on misery and poverty among the population. Regardless of whether Cultuurstelsel should be valued positively or negatively, most historians agree that the system had been one of the most important parts of Dutch colonialism in the Dutch East Indies from 1830 to 1870. Some at that time even thought that cultuurstelsel was the best colonial model that can be imagined. Keywords: Cultuurstelsel; Grobogan; Demak; Pacitan; tobacco; coffee I. Introduction The history of the Dutch East Indies economy in the 19th century was marked by a period of time called culturstelsel or forced cultivation or also referred to as the cultivation system. -
The Thatung in Cap Ngo Meh (Lantern Festival) Ritual in Hakka
M. Ikhsan Tanggok, Te Tatung in Cap Ngo Meh (Lantern Festival) Ritual in Hakka Society 655 Te Tatung in Cap Ngo Meh (Lantern Festival) Ritual in Hakka Society in Singkawang, West Kalimantan-Indonesia1 M. Ikhsan Tanggok Chin Kung Corner, Ciputat [email protected] Abstract: Cap Ngo Meh and Tatung are two things that cannot be sepa- rated from the life of Hakka people in Singkawang. In each Cap Ngo Meh festival, the performance of Tatung is a must. Cap Ngo Meh festival would not be completed if there was no performance of Tatung. Tatung can help humans and otherwise humans also have to give gifts to him. Terefore, Tatung is a special performance in Cap Ngo Meh festival in Singkawang. Te main purpose of this paper is to show the relationship between Tatung performance and Cap Ngo Meh festival in Singkawang. Te function of Tatung performance in Cap Ngo Meh festival in Singkawang is not only to repel evil spirits that may afect humans, but also to promote economics, improving of popularity himself and tourism in Singkawang. Keywords: Tatung, Cap Ngo Meh festival, Exchange, Soul, Gods, Belief. Abstrak: Cap Ngo Meh dan Tatung merupakan dua hal tak dapat dipisahkan dari kehidupan masayarakat Hakka di Singkawang. Dalam setiap perayaan Cap Ngo Meh, penampilan Tatung merupakan keha- rusan. Tanpa Tatung tidak ada Cap gho Meh, maka Tatung menjadi penampilan istimewa di Singkawang di setiap perayaan Cap Gho Meh. Fungsi penampilan Tatung ini ternyata bukan saja untuk mengusir ruh jahat yang akan memengaruhi manusia, tetapi juga memromosikan ke- pentingan ekomi, pluralitas, dan wisata di Singkawang. -
Houqua and His China Trade Partners in the Nineteenth Century
Global Positioning: Houqua and His China Trade Partners in the Nineteenth Century The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Wong, John. 2012. Global Positioning: Houqua and His China Trade Partners in the Nineteenth Century. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:9282867 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA © 2012 – John D. Wong All rights reserved. Professor Michael Szonyi John D. Wong Global Positioning: Houqua and his China Trade Partners in the Nineteenth Century Abstract This study unearths the lost world of early-nineteenth-century Canton. Known today as Guangzhou, this Chinese city witnessed the economic dynamism of global commerce until the demise of the Canton System in 1842. Records of its commercial vitality and global interactions faded only because we have allowed our image of old Canton to be clouded by China’s weakness beginning in the mid-1800s. By reviving this story of economic vibrancy, I restore the historical contingency at the juncture at which global commercial equilibrium unraveled with the collapse of the Canton system, and reshape our understanding of China’s subsequent economic experience. I explore this story of the China trade that helped shape the modern world through the lens of a single prominent merchant house and its leading figure, Wu Bingjian, known to the West by his trading name of Houqua. -
Cycling Taiwan – Great Rides in the Bicycle Kingdom
Great Rides in the Bicycle Kingdom Cycling Taiwan Peak-to-coast tours in Taiwan’s top scenic areas Island-wide bicycle excursions Routes for all types of cyclists Family-friendly cycling fun Tourism Bureau, M.O.T.C. Words from the Director-General Taiwan has vigorously promoted bicycle tourism in recent years. Its efforts include the creation of an extensive network of bicycle routes that has raised Taiwan’s profile on the international tourism map and earned the island a spot among the well-known travel magazine, Lonely Planet’s, best places to visit in 2012. With scenic beauty and tasty cuisine along the way, these routes are attracting growing ranks of cyclists from around the world. This guide introduces 26 bikeways in 12 national scenic areas in Taiwan, including 25 family-friendly routes and, in Alishan, one competition-level route. Cyclists can experience the fascinating geology of the Jinshan Hot Spring area on the North Coast along the Fengzhimen and Jinshan-Wanli bikeways, or follow a former rail line through the Old Caoling Tunnel along the Longmen-Yanliao and Old Caoling bikeways. Riders on the Yuetan and Xiangshan bikeways can enjoy the scenic beauty of Sun Moon Lake, while the natural and cultural charms of the Tri-Mountain area await along the Emei Lake Bike Path and Ershui Bikeway. This guide also introduces the Wushantou Hatta and Baihe bikeways in the Siraya National Scenic Area, the Aogu Wetlands and Beimen bikeways on the Southwest Coast, and the Round-the-Bay Bikeway at Dapeng Bay. Indigenous culture is among the attractions along the Anpo Tourist Cycle Path in Maolin and the Shimen-Changbin Bikeway, Sanxiantai Bike Route, and Taiyuan Valley Bikeway on the East Coast. -
Sugar, Steam and Steel: the Industrial Project in Colonial Java, 1830-1850
Welcome to the electronic edition of Sugar, Steam and Steel: The Industrial Project in Colonial Java, 1830-1885. The book opens with the bookmark panel and you will see the contents page. Click on this anytime to return to the contents. You can also add your own bookmarks. Each chapter heading in the contents table is clickable and will take you direct to the chapter. Return using the contents link in the bookmarks. The whole document is fully searchable. Enjoy. G Roger Knight Born in deeply rural Shropshire (UK), G Roger Knight has been living and teaching in Adelaide since the late 1960s. He gained his PhD from London University's School of Oriental and African Studies, where his mentors included John Bastin and CD Cowan. He is an internationally recognised authority on the sugar industry of colonial Indonesia, with many publications to his name. Among the latest is Commodities and Colonialism: The Story of Big Sugar in Indonesia, 1880-1940, published by Brill in Leiden and Boston in 2013. He is currently working on a 'business biography' — based on scores of his newly discovered letters back home — of Gillian Maclaine, a young Scot who was active as a planter and merchant in colonial Java during the 1820s and 1830s. For a change, it has almost nothing to do with sugar. The high-quality paperback edition of this book is available for purchase online: https://shop.adelaide.edu.au/ Sugar, Steam and Steel: The Industrial Project in Colonial Java, 1830-18 by G Roger Knight School of History and Politics The University of Adelaide Published in Adelaide by University of Adelaide Press The University of Adelaide Level 14, 115 Grenfell Street South Australia 5005 [email protected] www.adelaide.edu.au/press The University of Adelaide Press publishes externally refereed scholarly books by staff of the University of Adelaide. -
The Collapse of the International Tin Agreement
CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by IDS OpenDocs The Collapse of the International Tin Agreement Michael Prest Introduction unimportant part of an international dispute which it Early on the morning of 24 October 1985 Michael only dimly understood. The field was quickly Brown,chiefexecutiveof the London Metal dominated by national governments, big banks, and in Exchange, was sitting in his office chatting to the the background the United Nations Conference on chairman of the exchange's committee, Ted Jordan. Trade and Development. The telephone range. It was Pieter de Koning, the International Tin Council's buffer stock manager and For the LME the issues were the sanctity of contract the most powerful person in the world tin market. and the preservation of the exchange. But for the other There was a brief conversation. Brown recalls:'I participants it was a matter of realpolitik, in which the turned to Ted and said "de Koning has suspended stakes were the future of international commodity trading".' agreements, the debt crisis, and relations between developing commodity producing countries and In that instant both realised that chaos threatened. industrial consumers of commodities. What originated Their immediate concern was the LME and its as a commercial dispute - the announcement by the members. They knew that around half of the LME's 27 ITC that it could not pay its debts - rapidly ring dealing members' were heavily involved with the intensified and expanded into a test case of the ability buffer stock. They also suspected that de Koning's of commodity agreements to survive in adverse careful word 'suspend' was code for defaulting on his market conditions. -
Liem Thian Joe's Unpublished History of Kian Gwan
Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 27, No.2, September 1989 Liem Thian Joe's Unpublished History of Kian Gwan Charles A. COPPEL* Studies on the role of the overseas Chinese sue the talent for writing which was already in the economies of Southeast Asia are rare evident in his schoolwork. A short ex enough, despite their generally acknowledged perience as a trader in Ngadiredjo soon con importance. This has been particularly true vinced him, however, that he should seek his of Indonesia, and consequently it is a matter livelihood as a writer. of some interest to discover an unpublished His career in journalism seems to have history of Kian Gwan (Oei Tiong Ham Con begun in the 1920's when he joined the staff of cern), the biggest and longest-lasting Chinese the Semarang peranakan Chinese daily, Warna business of all in Indonesia. Further interest Warla (although there is some suggestion that is aroused by the fact that the manuscript was he also contributed to the Jakarta daily, Per written by the late Liem Thian Joe, the well niagaan, at this time). In the early 1930's, he known Semarang journalist and historian. moved from Warna Warta to edit the Semarang This combination gives us promise of insights daily, Djawa Tengah (and its sister monthly into the firm itself, the Oei family which Djawa Tengah Review). In later years he established it and built it up, and the history of was also a regular contributor to the weekly the Chinese of Semarang where its original edition of the Jakarta newspaper, Sin PO.2) office was founded. -
SPANISH CEPAL Economic Commission
Distr. RESTRICTED E/CEPAL/R.249 1H January 1932 ENGLISH ORIGINAL: SPANISH C E P A L Economic Commission for Latin America LINKS OF THE TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS WITH THE TIN INDUSTRY IN BOLIVIA Jan Kfiakal */ jV The author is a regional expert of the CEPAL/CTC Joint Unit on Transnational Corporations. The views expressed in this working paper are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Organization. 81-9-2017 - 1X• • 1» - CONTENTS Page Introduction . i Part One THE INTERNATIONAL TIN INDUSTRY 5 1. Characteristics of the product 5 2. Tin mining and reserves 7 3. Sovereignty of the developing countries over their tin resources 10 4. Tin smelting and position of the main transnational corporations 15 5. Control over the world tin market 20 Part Two THE BOLIVIAN TIN INDUSTRY AND ITS LINKS WITH TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS 29 1. The importance of mining and tin in the Bolivian economy 29 2. Early stage of the industry and its nationalization in 1952 . 31 3. Establishment of the Corporación Minera de Bolivia and the* postnationalization period 34 4. Continued dependence on foreign smelters 36 5. Importance of the public enterprise in tin smelting 42 6. Domestic integration of the mining and metallurgical sector (COMIBOL and ENAF) and reaction of the foreign smelters 44 7. Marketing of metal tin by ENAF 57 8. Industrialization based on tin: its limits and possibilities for increased regional co-operation 64 9. Conclusions to be drawn from the Bolivian experience 71 Annex 1 Selected Bibliography 77 Annex 2 Main clauses and technical specifications included in ENAF's tin marketing contracts 79 Annex 3 Contract between ENAF and an international sales agent . -
Tin from Myanmar – a Scenario for Applying the European Union Regu- Lation on Supply Chain Due Diligence
Commodity TopNews Fakten ● Analysen ● Wirtschaftliche Hintergrundinformationen 61 TIN FROM MYANMAR – A SCENARIO FOR APPLYING THE EUROPEAN UNION REGU- LATION ON SUPPLY CHAIN DUE DILIGENCE Christian Heimig 1, Philip Schütte 2, Gudrun Franken 2, Christoph Klein 3 Abb. 1:: Small-scale miners at the Mawchi tin mine, central Myanmar (photo: BGR). INTRODUCTION Starting from January 1, 2021, European Union including, among others, conflict financing, the (EU)-based importers of tin, tantalum and tungs- worst forms of child labor and human rights vi- ten, their ores, and gold are required to comply olations. To this end, the OECD guidance defi- with the EU regulation on supply chain due dili- nes a five-step due diligence framework, which gence (EU, 2017). The EU regulation is based on has been integrated into the EU regulation. The- the OECD due diligence guidance for responsib- se steps include establishing strong management le supply chains. The contents of this guidance systems, identifying and responding to supply provide a framework for companies to identify chain risks, carrying out independent third-party and mitigate risks in their mineral supply chains audits at certain points in the supply chain, and public reporting on due diligence implementation (OECD, 2016). 1 Formerly Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources, presently at Südwestdeutsche Salzwerke AG 2 Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources 3 Formerly Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources, presently at KPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft 2 Commodity TopNews The US Dodd-Frank Act, enacted in 2010, al- oned experts to develop an indicative global list ready defines certain sourcing requirements for of such areas, companies remain responsible for so-called conflict minerals. -
2020 Report on Global Tin Resources & Reserves
Global Resources & Reserves Security of long-term Ɵ n supply 2020 Update Contents Global Resources and Reserves .......................................................................................................... 3 Summary ............................................................................................................................................. 3 The Risk: Critical Materials .................................................................................................................. 3 Resources and Reserves ...................................................................................................................... 4 Tin resources and reserves calculation ........................................................................................... 5 ITA’s estimate of global tin resources and reserves ....................................................................... 6 Resources and Reserves by Region ..................................................................................................... 8 North America ................................................................................................................................. 8 South America ................................................................................................................................. 9 Africa ............................................................................................................................................. 10 Europe .......................................................................................................................................... -
Ideal Solutions for Railway Squatting in Malaysia: Alternatives to Eviction
Volume: 3 Issue: 15 [December, 2018] pp.29-39] Journal of Islamic, Social, Economics and Development eISSN: 0128-1755 Journal website: www.jised.com IDEAL SOLUTIONS FOR RAILWAY SQUATTING IN MALAYSIA: ALTERNATIVES TO EVICTION Najah Inani Abdul Jalil1 Khuzaimah Mat Salleh2 1 School of Law, Universiti Utara Malaysia (UUM), (E-mail: [email protected]) 2 School of Law, Universiti Utara Malaysia (UUM), (E-mail: [email protected]) Accepted date: 02-09-2018 Published Date: 20-12-2018 To cite this document: Jalil, N. I. A., & Salleh. K. M. (2018). Ideal Solutions for Railway Squatting in Malaysia: Alternatives to Eviction. Journal of Islamic, Social, Economics and Development, 3 (15), 29-39. __________________________________________________________________________________________ Abstract: The provision of affordable housing in Malaysia has become a major problem for the policymaker. The problems are reflected by the mushrooming of squatters especially on railway land. The purpose of this research is to propose for alternatives solutions to railway squatters as compared to prevalent eviction procedures taken by the authorities. The solution for the eradication of railway squatters must be uniquely designed as eviction shall not be considered as a prototype in eradicating the railway squatters. The problems associated with eviction are violence to occupants, properties and in most cases, there are high possibilities of re-entry incidence by the squatters into a new illegal settlement. Hence, it is important to find alternatives solution which enable to provide some insight on how the problems to be solved holistically. In doing so, the research is executed by the analysis on the statutory provisions, decided cases and articles with the discussion on squatter’s resettlement programme from foreign countries with the belief that the myriad of solutions may be expensive but most of the failed resettlement programme resulted from the one-size-fit-all type of solutions. -
Scanned Using Book Scancenter 5033
THE PRICE OF RICE Center for East Asian Studies Western Washington University 516 High Street Bellingham, WA, USA 98225-9064 Studies on East Asia, Volume 29 The Price of Rice: Market Integration in Eighteenth-Century China, by Sui-wai Cheung The Center for East Asian Studies publishes scholarly works on topics relating to China, Japan, Korea and Mongolia Managing Editor: Scott Pearce THE PRICE OF RICE: Market Integration in Eighteenth-Century China by Sui-WAi Cheung Center for East Asian Studies, Western Washington University ©2008 by Center for East Asian Studies, Western Washington University All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without prior permission in writing from the copyright-holder, or as expressly permitted by law. Cataloging-in-Publication Data Cheung, Sui-wai, 1961- The price of rice : market integration in eighteenth- century China / by Sui-wai Cheung. p. cm. — (Studies on East Asia ; v. 29) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-914584-30-8 1. Rice trade —China—History—18th century. 2. Rice—Prices—China—History—18th century. 3. China—Economic conditions —18th century. 4. China—Economic policy—1644-1912. I. Title. II. Series. HD9066.C572 C44 2008 Manufactured in the United States of America To Yin-shan, with love Table of Contents Map 1: The Grand Canal.....................................................ix Table of Weights and Measures...........................................x Table of Currencies (Approximate