Labour Studies Podcasts

Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit(NALSU)

Hosted by the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) and the Departments of Sociology and Industrial Sociology, and Economics and Economic History at Rhodes University. The Labour Studies Podcasts are from our popular Labour Studies Seminar Series, launched in 2015. We cover "labour studies" in the broadest sense: labour and left history, policy and political economy, unions and popular struggles.

  1. NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Book launch: Henry Dee |"Militant Migrants: Clements Kadalie, the ICU and the Mass Movement of Black Workers in Southern Africa, 1896-1951"

    6D AGO

    NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Book launch: Henry Dee |"Militant Migrants: Clements Kadalie, the ICU and the Mass Movement of Black Workers in Southern Africa, 1896-1951"

    SPEAKER AND TOPIC: Book launch: Henry Dee | Militant Migrants: Clements Kadalie, the ICU and the Mass Movement of Black Workers in Southern Africa, 1896-1951 Henry Dee discusses the remarkable life of Clements Kadalie, who exploded on the global stage as head of the Industrial & Commercial Workers' Union of Africa (ICU). A massive popular movement founded in 1919, it exploded across South Africa, also into Eswatini, Lesotho, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe. In the 1920s, it completely overshadowed nationalist and communist parties, organising perhaps 250,000 workers and labour tenants. Kadalie was a famed orator, journalist and organiser, electrifying rallies with calls for economic freedom & all-in mass organisation. Praised as the most important black worker leader in the world, Malawian-born Kadalie was championed by W.E.B. Du Bois, C.L.R. James, Tom Mann, and George Padmore. His story illuminates the period his star rose: the Malawian diaspora and immigrant politics, class struggles and transnational organising, and battles over gender, citizenship, nation and respectabilityDee's deeply researched Militant Migrants is the first full biography of Kadalie. It examines his evolving ideas, African impact, and global importance, & influences, like black nationalism, Christianity and syndicalism; it looks at his unprecedented successes, inescapable failures, and complicated personal life. While the ICU won gains and alarmed colonial governments, it imploded into autocratic leadership, corruption, factionalism and bitterness; the ICU story is a tale of a man's fall from hero into alcoholism, a broken family, and ruined reputation. DETAILS: Recording of livestreamed event in Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU)'s Labour Studies Seminar Series, 19 February 2026, 4pm, Eden Grove 3, Rhodes University. SPEAKER: Henry Dee is a research fellow at Northumbria University, UK, and historian of empire, labour and migration in the early 20th century. He co-edited (w. David Johnson) I See You: The Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union of Africa, 1919-1930, a collection of primary sources (HiPSA: South Africa). His biography of Kadalie, "Militant Migrants", was published by Liverpool University Press. Henry's latest research compares unions in southern Africa, Sri Lanka and Myanmare. HOSTS: Series run by NALSU in partnership with Departments of Sociology & Industrial Sociology and Economics & Economic History, Rhodes University. ABOUT NALSU: Based in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, NALSU is engaged in policy, research, and workers' education, has a democratic, non-sectarian, non-aligned, and pluralist practice, and active relations with other advocacy, labour, and research organisations. We are named in honour of Neil Aggett, union organiser and medical doctor who died in 1982 in an apartheid jail. MORE: http://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu

    1h 13m
  2. NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Peter Cole, "Dockworker Battles on the Global Waterfront: Unions, Boycotts, and Apartheid"

    FEB 26

    NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Peter Cole, "Dockworker Battles on the Global Waterfront: Unions, Boycotts, and Apartheid"

    SPEAKER AND TOPIC: Peter Cole, Dockworker Battles on the Global Waterfront: Unions, Boycotts, and Apartheid. In the early 1960s, dockworkers around the world stood on the frontline of the struggle against apartheid in South Africa. This included workers in Australia, Sweden, Trinidad, the United States of America, and in other countries refusing to handle South African cargo or ships. Like other workers, dockers have organised and unionised to defend their rights and win gains, and have also sometimes deployed their collective power in larger struggles for justice. But, standing at the centre of global trade and supply chains, dockworkers have extraordinary leverage. This seminar examines this important internationalist battle, with a focus on the anti-apartheid movement and dock unions in the USA in the early 1960s. DETAILS: Recording of a live, online, event in the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) Labour Studies Seminar Series, held on Wednesday, 7 May, 2025. SPEAKER: Peter Cole is a Professor of History at Western Illinois University (USA) and Research Associate in the Society, Work and Development Institute (SWOP) at the University of the Witwatersrand. He also writes on contemporary politics, especially labour, race, and social movements. Author of Wobblies on the Waterfront: Interracial Unionism in Progressive-Era Philadelphia (2007) and the award-winning  Dockworker Power: Race and Activism in Durban and the San Francisco Bay Area (2018). He edited Wobblies of the World: A Global History of the IWW (2017, with David Struthers and Kenyon Zimmer), Ben Fletcher: The Life and Times of a Black Wobbly (2021, revised), and Herb Mills' Presente: A Dockworker Story (2024). HOSTS: The Labour Studies Seminar Series is run by the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) in partnership with the Departments of Sociology & Industrial Sociology, and Economics & Economic History, Rhodes University. ABOUT NALSU: Based in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) is engaged in policy, research, and workers' education, has a democratic, non-sectarian, non-aligned, and pluralist practice, and active relations with a range of advocacy, labour, and research organisations. We draw strength from our location in a province where the legacy of apartheid and the cheap labour system, and post-apartheid contradictions, are keenly felt. We are named in honour of Dr Neil Hudson Aggett, a union organiser and medical doctor who died in 1982 in an apartheid jail after enduring brutality and torture. MORE: http://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu

    1h 18m
  3. NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Dinga Sikwebu, "COSATU@40: Decades of Political Alignment and Entanglement" (Annual Neil Aggett Labour Studies Lecture)

    12/10/2025

    NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Dinga Sikwebu, "COSATU@40: Decades of Political Alignment and Entanglement" (Annual Neil Aggett Labour Studies Lecture)

    SPEAKER AND TOPIC: Dinga Sikwebu, "COSATU@40: Decades of Political Alignment and Entanglement". TOPIC: In this Lecture—on the eve of COSATU’s 40th anniversary—labour stalwart Dinga Sikwebu examines the federation's long history of political alignment. Founded in December 1985, the federation became one of the world’s fastest growing union movements. It demonstrated a remarkable dynamism and bottom-up worker politics. When the ANC and SACP were unbanned in 1990, the federation was at the heart of the mass democratic movement. To gain political influence, COSATU opted to be part of the Tripartite Alliance with the two organisations. He explores on the efficacy of COSATU's political alignment strategy, including the original Alliance model, deployment of unionists onto election lists and repeated calls for workers to “swell the ranks of the ANC”. He evaluates COSATU strategies to push for pro-working-class policies through its alignment with the ANC, attempts to build a left axis with the SACP, as well as battles for Alliance reconfiguration. Beyond this, the Lecture critically examines the deeper conceptual framings that underpin the strategy, like the Leninist theory of trade union limitations—and suggested new ways of thinking about unions and politics, beyond union/party alliances. DETAILS: The Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) hosts the Annual Neil Aggett Labour Studies Lecture as part of its labour studies seminars series, in partnership with its annual Vuyisile Mini Workers School and Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES), South Africa. This Lecture was delivered 4PM, Thursday 20 November 2025, Graham Hotel, 123 High Street, Makhanda, South Africa & via Zoom. SPEAKER: Dinga Sikwebu is a retired trade unionist based in Johannesburg. He worked for 25 years as the head of education at the head office of the National Union of Metalworkers of SA (NUMSA). Presently, he is a Global Labour University (GLU) Research Associate at the University of the Witwatersrand. ABOUT NALSU: Based in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) at Rhodes University is engaged in policy, research, and workers' education, has a democratic, non-sectarian, non-aligned, and pluralist practice, and active relations with a range of advocacy, labour, and research organisations. We draw strength from our location in a province where the legacy of apartheid and the cheap labour system, and post-apartheid contradictions, are keenly felt. MORE: ⁠⁠http://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu

    2h 1m
  4. NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Prof. Emeritus Lloyd Sachikonye, "The Labour Movement and Struggles for Democracy and Livelihoods in Zimbabwe" (Annual Neil Aggett Labour Studies Lecture)

    03/26/2025

    NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Prof. Emeritus Lloyd Sachikonye, "The Labour Movement and Struggles for Democracy and Livelihoods in Zimbabwe" (Annual Neil Aggett Labour Studies Lecture)

    SPEAKER AND TOPIC: Lloyd Sachikonye, Annual Neil Aggett Labour Studies Lecture, "The Labour Movement and Struggles for Democracy and Livelihoods in Zimbabwe" TOPIC: Despite claims that workers' movements are fading away, they remain among the largest formations in civil society worldwide, including in Africa; they have been central to struggles for dignity, rights, and equality. In this Lecture, Professor Sachikonye shows how Zimbabwe's unions have been at the heart of struggles for democracy and livelihoods over the past 30 years. They spearheaded resistance to neo-liberal economic adjustment as well as to the authoritarian, militarised ZANU-PF party-state, operating deftly on the harsh terrain of a country wracked by prolonged crises. He examines how unions provided invaluable resources, representation, and leadership, not only to workers, but also to other sectors. This included mobilising an effective political party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). The MDC made significant gains, despite extensive vote-rigging and repression, and despite the limitations of the Government of National Unity formed in 2009 after disputed elections marred by violence and human rights abuses. Professor Sachikonye also examines how Zimbabwe's long, deep economic decline led to deindustrialisation and the contraction of formal sector jobs and union strongholds, as well as resulted in large-scale emigration. On the other hand, he shows that there has been an imaginative reconfiguration of unions, as labour continues to bridge economic and political struggles in Zimbabwe's difficult environment. DETAILS: The Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) hosts the Annual Neil Aggett Labour Studies Lecture as part of its labour studies seminars series, in partnership with its annual Vuyisile Mini Workers School. This Lecture was delivered at 4 pm on Tuesday 29 October 2024, at the Graham Hotel, Makhanda, South Africa, and streamed online. SPEAKER: Lloyd Sachikonye is Professor Emeritus of Development Studies, at the University of Zimbabwe. He has published widely on African labour movements, and on union, civil society, and the democracy struggles in Zimbabwe. Professor Sachikonye's books include Striking Back: The Labour Movement and the Post-Colonial State in Zimbabwe 1980-2000 (w. Brian Raftopoulos, 2001), Trade Unions and Party Politics: Labour Movements in Africa (w. Björn Beckman and Sakhela Buhlungu, 2010), When a State Turns on its Citizens (2011) and Building from the Rubble: The Labour Movement in Zimbabwe since 2000 (w. Brian Raftopoulos and Godfrey Kanyenze, 2018). He serves on the boards of the union-affiliated Labour and Economic Development Research Institute of Zimbabwe (LEDRIZ), the Farm Community Trust of Zimbabwe (FCTZ), the Global Labor Journal , and the Review of African Political Economy. ABOUT NALSU: The Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) is based in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) is engaged in policy, research, and workers' education, has a democratic, non-sectarian, non-aligned, and pluralist practice, and active relations with a range of advocacy, labour, and research organisations. We draw strength from our location in a province where the legacy of apartheid and the cheap labour system, and post-apartheid contradictions, are keenly felt. We are named in honour of Dr Neil Hudson Aggett, a union organiser and medical doctor who died in 1982 in an apartheid jail after enduring brutality and torture. MORE: http://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu

    1h 54m
  5. NALSU Labour Studies podcast | Anusa Daimon, Chitja Twala, Lucien van der Walt, "Labour Struggles in Southern Africa 1919-1949: New Perspectives on the Industrial and Commercial Workers’ Union (ICU)"

    06/03/2024

    NALSU Labour Studies podcast | Anusa Daimon, Chitja Twala, Lucien van der Walt, "Labour Struggles in Southern Africa 1919-1949: New Perspectives on the Industrial and Commercial Workers’ Union (ICU)"

    SPEAKERS & TOPIC: Anusa Daimon, Chitja Twala, Lucien van der Walt, "Labour Struggles in Southern Africa 1919-1949: New Perspectives on the Industrial and Commercial Workers’ Union (ICU)" TOPIC: The Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) and the Vuyisile Mini Workers School, in in partnership with HSRC Press, were proud to recently launch "Labour Struggles in Southern Africa 1919-1949: New Perspectives on the Industrial and Commercial Workers’ Union (ICU)." This collection provides fresh perspectives on the ICU, which was by far the largest black political organisation in southern Africa before the 1940s, active in six countries and in global trade union networks, and lasted into the 1950s.The book's chapters examine different aspects of the ICU’s record, achievements, and failures in relation to the post-apartheid present. In its syndicalist One Big Union approach to workers’ rights; emphasis on economic freedoms; internationalism; unmatched presence in rural areas and on farms; and robust protection of women and migrant workers, and sheer size, the ICU overshadowed rivals like the African National Congress (ANC), the Communist Party, and the Southern Rhodesia Bantu Voters' Association. It helped forge a popular and proletarian counter-public, and promised freedom through a general strike, not parliament. Not just an exercise in excavating struggle history, this volume demonstrates that the traditions and legacies of the ICU remain of great relevance to contemporary southern Africa. With the recent centennial of the ICU, it is time to revisit this once mighty movement.Contributors to the book include Anusa Daimon, Henry Dee, David Johnson, Peter Limb, Tom Lodge, Sibongiseni Mkhize, Tshepo Moloi, Noor Nieftagodien, Laurence Stewart, Chitja Twala, Nicole Ulrich, Elizabeth van Heyningen and Lucien van der Walt. The book also includes a previously unpublished paper on the ICU by the late Phillip Bonner, doyen of South African social history. The book was co-edited by David Johnson, Noor Nieftagodien and Lucien van der Walt, published by the HSRC Press, and brought together NALSU and the History Workshop at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits). We thank Wits for a generous contribution towards publishing costs. It is available at all good bookstores. For more on the book, and downloads (registration needed), visit the HSRC here: https://www.hsrcpress.ac.za/books/labour-struggles-in-southern-africa-1919-1949Three contributors presented at the launch, capturing some of the ICU’s spread and importance. Anusa Daimon looked at the rise of the ICU in Zimbabwe (then southern Rhodesia), and the role of "rabble-rouser" Robert Sambo; Chitja Twala presented his work (with Peter Limb) on the ICU in small Free State dorps and dorpies (small towns); Lucien van der Walt traced the history of the ICU in mining towns in Namibia (then South West Africa). They helped bring the ICU’s history to life. Details: This is a recording of a live event in the NALSU Labour Studies Seminar Series, partnered with the Vuyisile Mini Workers School, held on Wednesday, 15 November 2023, at the Graham Hotel, Makhanda, South Africa. The Vuyisile Mini Workers School, for unions and other working-class movements, is part of NALSU's Worker Education Project, of which see here https://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu/workereducation/. Work on the ICU is also part of NALSU's Labour History Project: for more information is available here https://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu/labourhistory/ ABOUT NALSU: Based in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, NALSU is engaged in policy, research and workers' education, has a democratic, non-sectarian, non-aligned and pluralist practice, and active relations with a range of advocacy, labour and research organisations. We are named in honour of Dr Neil Hudson Aggett, union organiser and medical doctor who died in 1982 in an apartheid jail after enduring brutality and torture.MORE: https://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu

    1h 34m
  6. NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Andrew Murray, "Why has South Africa's Industrial Policy Failed to Halt Deindustrialisation and Transform the Economy?

    04/05/2024

    NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Andrew Murray, "Why has South Africa's Industrial Policy Failed to Halt Deindustrialisation and Transform the Economy?

    SPEAKER: Andrew Murray, "Why has South Africa's Industrial Policy Failed to Halt Deindustrialisation and Transform the Economy?" TOPIC: This Lecture examines the evolution of industrial policy in South Africa, and what can be done to save the manufacturing sector. Manufacturing has fallen from 19.3% of GDP in 1994 to just 11.8% in 2019, costing hundreds of thousands of jobs. Employment in textiles, leather products, footwear and clothing fell 50% from 2000 to 2019. The remnants of these former mainstays of the Eastern Cape are rustbelts, gutted factories and stranded working-classes. Factories had been built within the framework of import-substitution, but were not globally competitive; the country remained dependent on raw material exports. With the neo-liberal turn in the 1990s, protective tariffs fell from 28% in 1990 to 8.2% in 15 years. Factories and jobs were washed away by cheap imports. Andrew Murray focuses on the policies that were intended to revive local industry from the 2000s, starting with the National Industrial Policy Framework (NIPF) and the Industrial Policy Action Plans (IPAPs), and moving into the more recent Reimagined Industrial Strategy and sector masterplans. Looking especially at the Eastern Cape, he evaluates these policies and examines the impact of state capacity. The Lecture closes with a consideration of what needs to be done to build a coordinated and technically capable state that can build a future fit economy, and negotiate reciprocal conditionalities and trade-offs with the private sector and other stakeholders. DETAILS: This is a recording of a live event in the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) Labour Studies Seminar Series, held on Tuesday, 14 November 2023, at Graham Hotel, Makhanda, South Africa.ABOUT NALSU: Based in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, is engaged in policy, research and workers' education. Built around a vibrant team from disciplines including Sociology and Economics & Economic History, it has active partnerships and relations with a range of advocacy, labour and research organisations. It draws strength from its location in a province where the legacy of apartheid and the cheap labour system, and the contradictions of the post-apartheid state, are keenly felt. We are named in honour of Dr Neil Hudson Aggett, a union organiser and medical doctor who died in 1982 in an apartheid jail after enduring brutality and torture.MORE: https://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu

    1h 43m
  7. NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Kate Philip, University of the Witwatersrand: Union-Based Workers' Cooperatives in Southern Africa

    11/02/2023

    NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Kate Philip, University of the Witwatersrand: Union-Based Workers' Cooperatives in Southern Africa

    SPEAKER AND TOPIC: Kate Philip, University of the Witwatersrand: "Union-Based Workers' Cooperatives in Southern Africa: Markets on the Margins: Mineworkers, Job Creation and Enterprise Development" TOPIC: Can we get off southern Africa's historic path of cheap labour, centralised capitalism and endemic rural poverty? And do workers' co-operatives show a viable way out, enabling justice and equality for the workers and poor? This seminar and book launch examines one of the most ambitious, systematic, and sustained efforts at union-backed worker-run producer co-operatives in southern Africa: the 30 co-operatives established by the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), in South Africa, Lesotho and Eswatini (Swaziland). Written by an insider –- Kate Philip, United Democratic Front (UDF) activist and coordinator of NUM's co-operatives' programme –- it charts the NUM experiment in people-driven development and rural transformation. It examines the successes, but also the failures, drawing the often-difficult lessons learned from grappling with the limits and opportunities that exist to reduce poverty and improve livelihoods. Kate Philip also explores whether and if so how, markets might be made to work better for the poor. The NUM co-operatives emerged against the backdrop of a massive strike. The mining industry has been core to capitalist South Africa, based on cheap, oppressed labour. The NUM was the first mass black worker-based union on the mines since the 1940s. It faced off against the mighty Chamber of Mines in 1987: employers cracked down; 40,000 mineworkers lost their jobs, and were sent back to their villages. To help these men and build the union, the NUM set up 30 worker co-operatives in three countries. Over time, NUM broadened the scope to include rural development and job creation through its Mineworkers Development Agency. The NUM's programme, evolving against the backdrop of South Africa's transition from apartheid, provided critical support to poor rural communities hard hit by escalating job losses on the mines. Kate Philip's book, "Markets on the Margins: Mineworkers, Job Creation and Enterprise Development," is published by James Currey Publishers. DETAILS: This is a recording of a live event in the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) Labour Studies Seminar Series, held on Wednesday, 15 May 2019, at Eden Grove, Seminar Room 2, Rhodes University, Makhanda, South Africa. DETAILS: This is a recording of a live event in the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) Labour Studies Seminar Series, held on Wednesday, 15 May 2019, at Eden Grove, Seminar Room 2, Rhodes University, Makhanda, South Africa. ABOUT NALSU: Based in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, is engaged in policy, research and workers' education. Built around a vibrant team from disciplines including Sociology and Economics & Economic History, it has active partnerships and relations with a range of advocacy, labour and research organisations. It draws strength from its location in a province where the legacy of apartheid and the cheap labour system, and the contradictions of the post-apartheid state, are keenly felt. We are named in honour of Dr Neil Hudson Aggett, a union organiser and medical doctor who died in 1982 in an apartheid jail after enduring brutality and torture. MORE: https://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu

    1h 11m
  8. NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Lucien van der Walt, Rhodes University: The History of Anarchism and Revolutionary Syndicalism in Africa

    10/06/2023

    NALSU Labour Studies Podcast | Lucien van der Walt, Rhodes University: The History of Anarchism and Revolutionary Syndicalism in Africa

    SPEAKER AND TOPIC: Lucien van der Walt, Rhodes University: Kantine Festival 2023 "The History of Anarchism and Revolutionary Syndicalism in Africa" PAPER: NALSU's director, Prof Lucien van der Walt, speaking at the 2023 "Kantine" theory festival in Germany, focused on two main phases: the 1860s-1930s, and the 1980s-present. Anarchism appeared in North Africa from the 1870s, and in southern Africa a decade later. By 1920, anarchists and syndicalists were an important presence in workers' movements, strikes, anti-imperialist struggles and the radical press in Algeria, Egypt, Mozambique, Tunisia, and South Africa; they had some presence in Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau and Morocco; they also influenced the Ghadar Party, in East Africa, and the Industrial and Commercial Workers Union (ICU), in southern Africa. The movement emerged in Nigeria in the 1930s, and was active in the Algerian war of independence. Some figures moved to the communist parties, or to FRELIMO and MPLA. A revival of anarchism and syndicalism began in 1980s, starting in Senegal, and later in Egypt, Eswatini, Kenya, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tunisia, Zambia, Zimbabwe. For links to the video, slides, and Kantine: http://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu DETAILS: Recording of blended event, 2023 "Kantine" festival, Thursday,3 August 2023, Subbotnik eV, Vettersstraße 34a, Chemnitz, Germany. ABOUT NALSU: Based in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, is engaged in policy, research and workers' education. Built around a vibrant team from disciplines including Sociology and Economics & Economic History, it has active partnerships and relations with a range of advocacy, labour and research organisations. It draws strength from its location in a province where the legacy of apartheid and the cheap labour system, and the contradictions of the post-apartheid state, are keenly felt. We are named in honour of Dr Neil Hudson Aggett, a union organiser and medical doctor who died in 1982 in an apartheid jail after enduring brutality and torture. MORE: https://www.ru.ac.za/nalsu

    1h 46m

About

Hosted by the Neil Aggett Labour Studies Unit (NALSU) and the Departments of Sociology and Industrial Sociology, and Economics and Economic History at Rhodes University. The Labour Studies Podcasts are from our popular Labour Studies Seminar Series, launched in 2015. We cover "labour studies" in the broadest sense: labour and left history, policy and political economy, unions and popular struggles.