Mining Gold and Manufacturing Ignorance
Occupational Lung Disease and the Buying and Selling of Labour in Southern Africa
Author(s)
McCulloch, Jock
Miller, Pavla
Language
EnglishAbstract
This open access book charts how South Africa’s gold mines have systematically suppressed evidence of hazardous work practices and the risks associated with mining. For most of the twentieth century, South Africa was the world’s largest producer of gold. Although the country enjoyed a reputation for leading the world in occupational health legislation, the mining companies developed a system of medical surveillance and workers’ compensation which compromised the health of black gold miners, facilitated the spread of tuberculosis, and ravaged the communities and economies of labour-sending states. The culmination of two decades of meticulous archival research, this book exposes the making, contesting, and unravelling of the companies’ capacity to shape – and corrupt – medical knowledge.
Keywords
Goldmining; Occupational lung disease; Silicosis; Tuberculosis; Southern Africa; Occupational injury; African studies; Colonialism; Racism; History of mining; EpidemiologyDOI
10.1007/978-981-19-8327-6ISBN
9789811983276, 9789811983269, 9789811983276Publisher
Springer NaturePublisher website
https://www.springernature.com/gp/products/booksPublication date and place
Singapore, 2023Grantor
Imprint
Palgrave MacmillanClassification
Occupational medicine
Public health and preventive medicine
History of science
African history
Colonialism and imperialism