Biblioteca / 2000-2009
Deborah Bernstein. Constructing Boundaries. Jewish and Arab Workers in Mandatory Palestine.
Albany: State University of New York Press, 2000.
290 páginas.
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Current Approaches and New Directions
The Split Labor Market Theory and Its Historical Grounding
Part I
The Split Develops
1 – The Split Labor Market of Mandatory Palestine: Actors, Sectors, and Strategies
Demographic and Social Trends
Jewish and Arab Labor
The Differential Value of Jewish and Arab Labor
The Economic Sectors of Palestine
Interrelations
From Sectors Back to Actors
Alternative Strategies
2 – Haifa— Growing and Growing Apart
Early Tremors of Growth
Expanding Communities and New Neighborhoods
Haifa—the Political Context
Spheres of Cooperation and the Pull of Segregation
Arab and Jewish Labor
To Conclude
Part II
In the Labor Market
3 – Construction— Competing at the Work Site
Construction—Fluctuation and Scope
Dilemmas of Organization
Wages and Competition
The Borowski Building
To Conclude
4 – Manufacturing Industry—Almost Separate
Trends in Manufacturing in Palestine
Haifa—the Center of Heavy Industry
When Working Together
To Conclude
5 – The Haifa Port—Entering the Gateway
The Haifa Port and the Issue of Jewish Labor
The Labor Force of the Haifa Port—Major Trends
Exporting the Citrus Crates
In the Customs Transit Shed
Working Together, Acting Together?
To Conclude
6 – The Palestine Railways: “Here We Are All Natives…” or the Limits of Cooperation
Trends in the Labor Force of the Palestine Railway
The Palestine Railway and Its Internal Organization
Wage and Conditions of Service
Joint Action and Joint Organization
To Conclude
Conclusion
Bibliography