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LEADER 00000cam a2200709Ia 4500 
001    ocn862126053 
003    OCoLC 
005    20190405013732.3 
006    m     o  d         
007    cr cnu---unuuu 
008    121119s2013    enk     ob    001 0 eng d 
020    9781107417250|q(electronic book) 
020    1107417252|q(electronic book) 
020    9781139626323|q(electronic book) 
020    1139626329|q(electronic book) 
020    |z9781107039698|q(hardback) 
020    |z110703969X|q(hardback) 
035    (OCoLC)862126053 
040    UkCbUP|beng|epn|cAUD|dCCO|dOCLCO|dE7B|dGPM|dN$T|dOCLCO
       |dVLB|dOCLCQ|dBUF|dUAB|dOCLCA|dOCLCQ|dOCLCA|dOCLCQ 
043    a-ii---|aa-io--- 
049    RIDW 
050  4 HD9116.I415|bB67 2013eb 
072  7 BUS|x070000|2bisacsh 
082 04 338.1/73610954|223 
090    HD9116.I415|bB67 2013eb 
100 1  Bosma, Ulbe,|d1962-|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/
       n98004414 
245 14 The sugar plantation in India and Indonesia :|bindustrial 
       production, 1770-2010 /|cUlbe Bosma. 
264  1 Cambridge :|bCambridge University Press,|c2013. 
300    1 online resource (xii, 323 pages). 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    computer|bc|2rdamedia 
338    online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 
340    |gpolychrome|2rdacc 
347    text file|2rdaft 
490 1  Studies in comparative world history 
500    Title from publishers bibliographic system (viewed on 09 
       Oct 2013). 
504    Includes bibliographical references and index. 
505 0  1. Producing Sugar for the World -- Where It All Began -- 
       Chinese Plantations around Batavia -- From Luxury to Bulk:
       The Revolution in Sugar Consumption -- The Atlantic 
       Plantation System: Its Origins and Persistence -- 
       Explanations for the Divergent Trajectories -- Taxation 
       and Class and Property Relations -- Financial Circuits -- 
       Imperial Ambitions -- 2. East Indian Sugar versus Slave 
       Sugar -- Plantation Experiments in Late Eighteenth-Century
       India -- Ryotwari Taxes and Sugar Experiments in South 
       India -- East Indian Interests and Non-Slave Sugar -- The 
       Rise of the East India Sugar Industry -- Plantations in 
       South Asia? -- The Downfall of Industrial Cane Sugar in 
       North India -- Surviving Sugar Manufacturers -- 3. Java: 
       From Cultivation System to Plantation Conglomerate -- Van 
       den Bosch and His Cultivation System -- The Cultivation 
       System and the Advance of Wage Labor -- The Growth of Wage
       Labor Attending the Advance of Technology. 
505 8  Marginal Peasants and Sharecroppers Providing the Labor --
       Tied to the Sawah -- Limitations of Colonial Liberalism --
       Free Labor? -- 4. Sugar, Science, and Technology: Java and
       India in the Late Nineteenth Century -- The Role of 
       Irrigation -- New Mills and Other New Devices -- 
       Statistics and Botany -- The Bombay Deccan: The Double 
       Frontier -- Java: Labor and Technology -- Journalism, 
       Business, and Botany -- Ever More Hands Are Needed -- 5. 
       The Era of the Global Sugar Market, 1890 -- 1929 -- Cane 
       Fires, Conflict, and Resistance -- Multiple Resistance in 
       the Sugar Industry -- Labor Policies during High 
       Colonialism -- Champaran: From Indigo to Sugar -- 
       Agriculture or Industry? -- 6. Escaping the Plantation? --
       The End of a Golden Era -- Suffering from the Collapse of 
       the Java Sugar Industry -- The Final Years of Java's 
       Colonial Sugar Industry -- The Reappearance of the Sugar 
       Plantation in Java -- India: Price Control, Zones, and 
       Cooperatives -- The Sugar Syndicate, Sugar Factories, and 
       Congress -- Factory Zones, Cooperatives, and Gur in West 
       Champaran -- Vertical Integration -- The Factory 
       Cooperatives in the Bombay Deccan (Maharashtra) -- The 
       Plantation and the Cane Cutters -- Conclusion. 
520    "European markets almost exclusively relied on Caribbean 
       sugar produced by slave labor until abolitionist campaigns
       began around 1800. Thereafter, importing Asian sugar and 
       transferring plantation production to Asia became a 
       serious option for the Western world. In this book, Ulbe 
       Bosma details how the British and Dutch introduced the 
       sugar plantation model in Asia and refashioned it over 
       time. Although initial attempts by British planters in 
       India failed, the Dutch colonial administration was far 
       more successful in Java, where it introduced in 1830 a 
       system of forced cultivation that tied local peasant 
       production to industrial manufacturing. A century later, 
       India adopted the Java model in combination with farmers' 
       cooperatives rather than employing coercive measures. 
       Cooperatives did not prevent industrial sugar production 
       from exploiting small farmers and cane cutters, however, 
       and Bosma finds that much of modern sugar production in 
       Asia resembles the abuses of labor by the old plantation 
       systems of the Caribbean"--|cProvided by publisher. 
588 0  Print version record. 
590    eBooks on EBSCOhost|bEBSCO eBook Subscription Academic 
       Collection - North America 
650  0 Sugar plantations|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects
       /sh2007006116|zIndia|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names
       /n80125948-781|xHistory.|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/
       subjects/sh99005024 
650  0 Sugar plantations|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects
       /sh2007006116|zIndonesia|zJava|0https://id.loc.gov/
       authorities/subjects/sh85069786-781|xHistory.|0https://
       id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh99005024 
650  0 Sugar trade|zIndia|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/
       subjects/sh2010115037|xHistory.|0https://id.loc.gov/
       authorities/subjects/sh99005024 
650  0 Sugar trade|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/
       sh85129716|zIndonesia|zJava|0https://id.loc.gov/
       authorities/subjects/sh85069786-781|xHistory.|0https://
       id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh99005024 
650  7 Sugar plantations.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/
       1744089 
650  7 History.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/958235 
650  7 Sugar trade.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/1137428 
651  7 India.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/1210276 
651  7 Indonesia|zJava.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/
       1244461 
655  4 Electronic books. 
655  7 History.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/1411628 
776 08 |iPrint version:|aBosma, Ulbe.|tSugar plantation in India 
       and Indonesia.|dCambridge : Cambridge University Press, 
       2013|z9781107039698|w(DLC)  2013008595|w(OCoLC)829239893 
830  0 Studies in comparative world history.|0https://id.loc.gov/
       authorities/names/n83730763 
856 40 |uhttps://rider.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://
       search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&
       db=nlebk&AN=622117|zOnline eBook via EBSCO. Access 
       restricted to current Rider University students, faculty, 
       and staff. 
856 42 |3Instructions for reading/downloading the EBSCO version 
       of this eBook|uhttp://guides.rider.edu/ebooks/ebsco 
901    MARCIVE 20231220 
948    |d20190507|cEBSCO|tEBSCOebooksacademic NEW 4-5-19 7552
       |lridw 
994    92|bRID