Constructing Boundaries: Jewish and Arab Workers in Mandatory PalestineConstructing Boundaries examines the competition, interaction, and impact among Jewish and Arab workers in the labor market of Mandatory Palestine. It is both a labor market study, based on the Split Labor Market Theory, and a case study of the labor market of Haifa, the center of economic development in Mandatory Palestine. Bernstein demonstrates the impact of the pervasive national conflict on the relations between the workers of the two nationalities and between their labor movements. She analyzes the attempts of Jewish workers to construct boundaries between themselves and the Arab workers, and also highlights cases of cooperation between Jewish and Arab workers and of joint class struggle. |
Contents
The Split Labor Market of Mandatory Palestine Actors Sectors and Strategies | 19 |
Jewish and Arab Labor | 22 |
Jewish Labor | 23 |
Arab Labor | 25 |
The Differential Value of Jewish and Arab Labor | 29 |
The Economic Sectors of Palestine | 33 |
Interrelations | 34 |
From Sectors Back to Actors | 39 |
Haifathe Center of Heavy Industry | 116 |
Shemen and NesherNahum Wilbush and Michael Pollak | 118 |
The Tobacco and Cigarette IndustryMabruk and Hajj Tahir Qaraman | 124 |
When Working Together | 132 |
The Nur Match Factory | 133 |
The Nesher Quarry | 134 |
Mosaica Tile Factory | 136 |
To Conclude | 138 |
Alternative Strategies | 42 |
HaifaGrowing and Growing Apart | 48 |
Expanding Communities and New Neighborhoods | 53 |
Demographic GrowthAbsolute and Relative Change | 54 |
Spatial Growth the Formation of New Neighborhoods | 55 |
Haifathe Political Context | 61 |
Spheres of Cooperation and the Pull of Segregation | 63 |
Social Relations | 64 |
Municipal Relations | 65 |
Economic Relations | 67 |
Arab and Jewish Labor | 70 |
Jewish Labor | 74 |
Wages and Differentials | 76 |
To Conclude | 80 |
ConstructionCompeting at the Work Site | 83 |
ConstructionCompeting at the Work Site | 85 |
Dilemmas and Organization | 88 |
Wages and Competition | 92 |
The Borrowski Building | 99 |
To Conclude | 107 |
Manufacturing IndustryAlmost Separate | 109 |
Trends in Manufacturing in Palestine | 111 |
Arab Industry | 113 |
Mutual Impact | 114 |
The Haifa Port Entering the Gateway | 140 |
The Haifa Port and the Issue of Jewish Labor | 141 |
The Labor Force of the Haifa PortMajor Trends | 147 |
Exporting the Citrus Crates | 149 |
In the Customs Transit Shed | 154 |
Working Together Acting Together? | 161 |
To Conclude | 164 |
The Palestine Railways Here We Are All Natives or the Limits of Cooperation | 166 |
Trends in the Labor Force of the Palestine Railway | 170 |
The Palestine Railway and Its Internal Organization | 174 |
Wage and Conditions of Service | 180 |
Joint Action and Joint Organization | 186 |
Together Within a HistadrutOriented Organization 19191927 | 187 |
The Joint Committee 19281936 | 193 |
Two Organizations and Three Strikes 19391947 | 197 |
To Conclude | 204 |
Conclusion | 206 |
Glossary | 217 |
Abbreviations | 219 |
Notes | 221 |
255 | |
267 | |
275 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aba Houshi Arab and Jewish Arab Community Arab contractors Arab Economy Arab industrial Arab labor Arab population Arab Rebellion Arab sector Arab workers Aviv British capital competition construction cooperation Davar Department dunams earned economic employed factory Gertz Government of Palestine growth Hadar Hacarmel Haifa port Hebrew Hebrew Labor hereafter Histadrut Executive Hourani Ibid increased Israel Jerusalem Jewish Agency Jewish and Arab Jewish community Jewish immigration Jewish industry Jewish labor Jewish sector Jewish settlement Jewish workers Jews and Arabs joint action labor force land major Mandatory Palestine Mapai ment Metzer mils per day movement Muslim Nablus neighborhoods Nesher number of Jewish Ottoman Palestine Railway PAWS percent picket political porterage porters prosperity Qaraman railway workers Report RPTWO Seikaly Shemen skilled workers social Solel Boneh Split Labor Market Statistical Handbook strategies strike Studies tion town University of Haifa unskilled urban Vashitz village Yazbeck Yishuv Zionist
Popular passages
Page 11 - Figure 2C). The availability of cheap labor leads dominant workers to be displaced or threatened with displacement, since employers would prefer to hire cheaper labor. The threat of displacement may be accompanied by other changes in production, such as deskilling. Dominant group workers react to the threat of displacement by trying to prevent or limit capital's access to cheap labor, through efforts to exclude members of "cheap labor" groups from full participation in the labor market (arrow 2)....
Page 10 - ... secondary phenomenon, while that of the bourgeoisie is primary. C. Split Labor Market This approach places labor competition at the center of racist-nationalist movements, challenging the idea that they are the creation of the dominant bourgeoisie.11 Uneven development of capitalism on a world scale, exacerbated by imperialist domination, generates "backwardness" or "under-development
Page 10 - ... nationalities." Workers of these nations, unable to defend themselves against exploitation of the severest kind, became "cheap labor" (arrow 1 in Figure 2C). The availability of cheap labor leads dominant workers to be displaced or threatened with displacement, since employers would prefer to hire cheaper labor. The threat of displacement may be accompanied by other changes in production, such as deskilling. Dominant group workers react to the threat of displacement by trying to prevent or limit...