Episode 7: Politics Goes Into Labour
Dr. Thum Ping Tjin, Research Associate, Centre for Global History, University of Oxford
25-Sep-15 15:00
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The greatest force in Singapore’s decolonisation movement in the 1950s was organised labour. Workers coming together to fight to be treated as human beings provided the main impetus for change. But the colonial capitalist system was built on oppressing, abusing, overworking, and exploiting workers, and so the only way to gain workers’ rights was to change the government. But where did the labour movement come from? In this episode, PJ Thum goes back to the origins of the labour movement in Singapore. He explains how traditional forms of labour organisation were also explicitly political; how modern trade unionism arrived from Britain, China, India, and the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia); and the impact of political labour on Singapore in the first quarter of the 20th century.
Please send questions, comments, and feedback to thehistoryofsingapore@gmail.com or visit thehistoryofsingapore.com. Support the show at patreon.com/pjthum. For all the previous episodes in this series, search for "History of Singapore" on bfm.my.
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Tags: singaporean history, Singapore, work, labour, history, politics, colonial, labour movement, decolonisation, hosbypjthum, History of Singapore