Bolivian men and women Chuquicamata. Characterization of migratory flows from the artisanal mining period to the industrial era (1881-1942)

Abstract

The analysis of primary sources, such as bureaucratic documents of migratory control, documentary and newspaper archives, allows a quantification and characterization of the Bolivian migration in Chuquicamata between 1881 and 1942. We present the years of entry of Bolivian men and women, as well as their places of origin, occupation, marital status, age, and literacy. We frame our analysis according to four major stages from a period of artisanal exploitation to industrial exploitation under US capital. We identify a first period during the Pacific war (1881-1884), a second pre-industrial period (1885-1911), a third period of industrialization under Guggenheim family capital (1912-1922) and a fourth period of expansion and exploitation by Anaconda Copper (1923-1942). Although underestimated by the contemporaneous chronicles of each period, we argue that the Bolivian migrant labor force was fundamental for the maintenance and development of copper mining in Chuquicamata, both during its artisanal exploitation stage and the first decade of the industrial era.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID SCIELO:S0717-88322021000100146 Not found in local WOS DB
Título según SCOPUS: Bolivian men and women chuquicamata. Characterization of migratory flows from the artisanal mining period to the industrial era (1881-1942)
Título según SCIELO: Bolivianos y bolivianas en Chuquicamata. Caracterización de los flujos migratorios desde el período de la minería artesanal a la era industrial (1881-1942)
Título de la Revista: Revista de Historia (Chile)
Volumen: 1
Número: 28
Editorial: Universidad de Concepcion
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 146
Página final: 185
Idioma: Spanish
DOI:

10.29393/RH28-7BBDG20007

Notas: ISI, SCIELO, SCOPUS