Diamond Warriors in Colonial Namibia. Diamond Smuggling, Migrant Workers and Development in Owamboland
- Language: English
- Illustrations, tables
- Vol. 26, 2022
- ISBN 978-3-906927-45-9
- eISBN 978-3-906927-46-6
- ISSN 2234-9561
- eISSN 2297-458X
Job Shipululo Amupanda
Diamond Warriors in Colonial Namibia. Diamond Smuggling, Migrant Workers and Development in Owamboland
Diamond Warriors in Colonial Namibia
enters into unchartered scholarly territory of illegal diamond smuggling at the largest diamond mining company in colonial Namibia—De Beers’ Consolidated Diamond Mines of South West Africa (CDM). It details the underground activities of the natives (migrant workers) employed by the CDM and how these illicit activities accounted for rapid development in Owamboland. Beyond this account, the book takes on the deterministic ‘natural resource curse’ theory that equates natural resource endowments to a curse resulting in underdevelopment and sometimes conflict. It is argued and proven herein, from a decolonial standpoint, that such an approach is an oversimplification of the political economy of natural resources in Africa in general and Namibia in particular. The text also provides a contextual account of the contract labour system and details the symbiotic relationship between CDM and the colonial state before highlighting the remaining unanswered questions and areas of further research
Job Shipululo Amupanda is a Senior Lecturer, teaching politics, in the Department of Public Management and Political Studies at the University of Namibia. He served as a Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences (2016–2021) and Mayor of Windhoek from 2020 to 2021.
He holds a PhD in Political Studies from the University of Namibia. His research interest is in decoloniality, political economy, developmental state and black consciousness.