Labour Regulation in the Long Twentieth Century

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Labour Regulation in the Long Twentieth Century is conceived as a digital repository on labour regulations in India and one of the result of Thematic Module Labour as a Political Category under Merian-Tagore International Centre of Advanced Studies: 'Metamorphoses of the Political (ICAS:MP), an interdisciplinary forum for intellectual exchange funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). The repository is aslo an element of a larger project of multilateral cooperation that aims at creating "Extended Archives of Indian Labour".

In the period after the First World War, labour became a significant object of state regulation in India. This is not to say that there was no regulation in the period prior to this; but its character was markedly different. Regulations in the nineteenth century had a distinctly penal flavor. The Workmen's Breach of Contract Act of 1859 and a series of legislations directed towards indentured plantation labour in India and abroad were prominent examples of the penal character of labour regulations. Trade unions when they existed were subject to criminal trespass laws.

The rapid expansion of industries and industrial labour in the years leading up to and during the First World War, the upsurge in labour protests in India, the Russian Revolution, the establishment of the ILO and the formation of the first All India Trade Union Congress, provide the immediate context for the shift in colonial state policy. The emergence of labour as a political category was now recognized in the Government of India Act of 1919 when a special representation for labour through nomination was introduced. At the same time, the question of the social reproduction of labour became a matter of concern for colonial state policy. These shifts were reflected in the slew of labour legislation in the 1920s and 1930s, for example, the Workmen's Compensation Act of 1923, the ending of penal labour regimes in 1925, the Trade Union Act of 1926 and the Trade Disputes Act of 1929, as an immediate response to the general strikes of 1928 in Bombay. No doubt these welfare oriented legislations covered only a small segment of industrial workers, nevertheless they marked a trend which culminated in the setting up of a formal sector labour regime in post-independent India, with the promulgation of the Industrial Disputes Act of 1947, the Factories Act of 1948, the Minimum Wages Act of 1948, the Employees State Insurance Act of 1948, the Plantation Labour Act of 1951 and the Provident Fund Act of 1952. The expansion of the Public Sector in the Nehruvian era accelerated the process of industrialization leading to an increase of the labour force in modern industries and establishments.

A labour regime based on extensive juridification of the employer-employee relations emerged within the frame of an interventionist state in post-independent India. There was a consequent expansion of labour related legal disputes, industrial tribunal awards on wages, bonus, dearness allowance, and welfare related compensations. Even as the bulk of labour including those in agriculture and urban informal sector were excluded from this labour regime, it still played a crucial role in shaping expectations and framing the vision of a modern industrial India. In the last decades of the twentieth and the early decades of the twenty first centuries, the regulatory modalities were substantially transformed under the twin pressure of an increasing neo-liberal turn in economic policy making and financial and trade globalisation.

The present repository of documents aims to track these changes over the long twentieth century. It presently comprises of the following five collections that together provide a valuable resource for mapping histories of labour.
The Labour Gazette brought out by the Bombay Labour Office from 1921 specialized in providing information on conditions of labour, industrial disputes and legislative changes in India and included international news about labour. The Labour Law Journal (1949- 2005) containing major judicial and labour court judgments, orders and pronouncements on labour disputes. ILO India, monthly reports, 1929-1970, a unique collection of reports sent out monthly from the ILO India Office tracking legislative and political changes in India. The All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC) Pamphlets Collection 1928-1990. This collection of printed pamphlets traces the origin and evolution of the organisation of the AITUC as the first All India Federation of Trade Unions. It also contains pamphlets containing the position of the AITUC on economic policy, major legislations concerned with labour and accounts of important events connected with the history of industrial relations in India. Commissions of Labour 1931-2002. This collection contains the reports, evidence and memorandums submitted to various official commissions in pre and post-independence India to enquire into conditions of labour, beginning with the Royal Commission on Labour in India (1929-31) and includes reports of the National Commissions on Labour 1969, 1991 and 2002.

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 16
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    S. A. Dange on Mundhra Affair
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1958) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    AITUC general secretary’s speech to parliament on the Mundhra Affair, as well as resolutions on the Chagla report.
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    Report at Coimbatore : 26th Session: January 6-12, 1961 Coimbatore.
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1961) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    Report on the 26th Session of the All-India Trade Union Congress (1961) covering the national and international situation, conditions of the Indian working class, specially about wages in the context of increase in productivity and the fulfilment of the Five Year Plans, as well as tasks before the trade union in the coming period. It has the following chapter titles: Socialism advances: imperialism retreats: nations liberated; Plan production – growth and new dangers; Prices, wages – who is prosperous?; Struggles – unity of the class; Government labour policy: unity of the class and political consciousness; Appendices: Statement on the murder of Patrice Lumumba; Extracts from Lok Sabha debates; Ownership and control.
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    Defeat Government-Monopolist Offensive with United Struggles
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1972) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    A special meeting of the General Council has been called because of unprecedented rise in cost of all commodities, with the cost of foods, cloth, edible oils, vegetables, rising dramatically. Pamphlet then outlines and dismisses government arguments. It has the following subchapter titles: Pressure of the monopolies; Struggle for progressive policies; Step-by-step surrender to monopolies; Monopolies fight for reversal of policies; Tasks before Trade Unions. Appendices: Price-Rise Index; Money Expansion; Manufacturing and wage costs; and F looks at the growth of monopolies.
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    The Budget & the Plan : Capitalist offensive and the people (Speech in parliament)
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1958) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    A speech by Dange, Shripad Amrit to parliament in reaction to the 1958 budget. Arguing that nothing had changed in the budget, and that the most needy were not getting the relief they needed, Dange's speech has the following subchapters: Everything is going up except wages; US aid - no philanthropy; Reason - recession at home; Gives 66 million, reaps 241 million; End of boom in India; Capitalist slogan - Denationalise, Ours - "More nationalisation"; Morality of our bourgeoisie; Dividend hunters, cheif ministers and steel workers; Mobilise LIC funds, company reserves; Stop monopoly growth; Reduce oil prices; Scandal in defence stores purchase; HAL strike - ensure trade union rights; produce more and save more.
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    For defence of motherland, T.U. unity and socialism : Report to the General Council of the AITUC, New Delhi, 16-18 November 1962
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1962) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    In the context of the current national emergency, the AITUC must decide on its position toward the India-China ‘war’.
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    Government Document on Industrial Relations
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1973) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    The booklet outlines the Labour Ministry's Proposals for a comprehensive Industrial Relations Law, comprising the following parts: machinery and procedure for dispute settlement, procedure for strike/lock-out; recognition of trade unions; unfair practices; standing orders; and trade union law. Partially illegible due to scan quality.
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    Government labour policy and the bank case
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1954) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    Taken from a speech given by Dange, Shripad Amrit to trade union functionaries, it discusses the resignation of Minister for Labour Giri, which was significant because it brought the government’s labour policy and the bank award to public attention, and reveals the Nehru government’s pro-monopolist policy.
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    In the rear of the 14th army : Why India is not mobilised
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1944) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    British troops in India and holding the Burma front against the Japanese have been suffering badly from disease and poor organization, and have apparently been forgotten. The booklet is a summary of the speech Dange, Shripad Amrit gave to the Trade Union Group of Members of the House of Commons on 5 December 1944 about the situation in India. Under the title “Chaos in India”, it includes the following subchapters: Legacy of the past; Bureaucratic incompetence; Transport; Coal muddle; Famine; Failure to rely on Peoples’ organisations; Industrial workers; Trade Union organization and gains; Rise in cost of living. Depreciation of wages; Attempts at disrupting trade unions, the peasantry, and people’s unity.
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    Law & order : Whose and for whom?
    (People's Publishing Press, 1967) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    The booklet is the full text that AITUC general secretary Dange, Shripad Amrit, in his role as leader of the communist group, delivered in parliament on 4 July 1967. The speech deals with important questions facing the country on Peking radio broadcasts, the Naxalbari problem, privy purses of princes, anti-working-class and pro-monopoly attitude of the government, centre-state relations in the non-congress ministries, and ‘law and order’ as enforced by the Home Ministry. The speech recevied widespread media attention.
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    Recession and resistance
    (All-India Trade Union Congress, 1967) Dange, Shripad Amrit
    The booklet is the report made by the General Secretary to the General Council of the AITUC about the economic recession and trade union policy and strategy toward it. It includes the chapters: On the present situation and tasks of trade unions