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industrial economy work without calling into question racial hierarchies in South Africa or the native authorities in Nigeria? And what should be done about ‘unemployed’ youths, who were ‘idle’ or ‘unruly’ and ‘single’ women without wage jobs, whose ordinary behaviour threatened the authority of the chiefs, elders or husbands? One of the solutions the colonial and South African authorities found to these problems was to identify individuals and groups and manage their differences according to geographical or ethnic origin, sex or age.

      Colonial cities offered spaces to develop and implement labour policies and population management, relying on the exclusion of differentiated groups according to the context and the period – exclusion that may have pertained to temporary migrants, but which also encompassed other more or less sizeable categories or subaltern groups (the unemployed, single women, non‐natives, delinquents, street traders, etc.). Our purpose here is not to write the social history of these groups, nor to give voice to those once reduced to silence by their conquerors. Instead, we aim to show that the metropolis was a space that simultaneously produced social subordination and constructed a bureaucratic reality. This task implies thinking about the inextricable entanglement between the governing and the governed, and questioning the extent to which the various instruments of power that were introduced generated new social realities and participated in building a bureaucratic state that devoted much more time, energy and resources to gathering information on these people, classifying and categorising them and allocating reserved spaces to them.

      These policies were simultaneously appropriated and challenged by the population, which indicates their relative importance. The Kano riots in 1953 and the Sharpeville massacre in 1960 revealed new social configurations that originated in the colonial domination (Chapter 1). They show that the marginalised groups express their own demands, thereby demonstrating autonomous political initiative, but at times within the horizon of the language and practices of government. They also bring out divergences between the social and political interests of the various groups involved. Our analysis thus marks a break from an approach centred on nationalism and resistance to colonialism or apartheid. Similarly, it departs from a class‐based approach that sees the marginalised population either as dominated by elites and incapable of revolt or as rebellious and driven by awareness of their precarious economic situation.

      Notes

      1 1. Regarding these two successive approaches, see Achille Mbembe (2010) and Vincent Foucher’s (2010) answer. See also the analysis in terms of hegemonic transactions developed by Jean‐François Bayart (1989) and on South Africa by Deborah Posel (1991).

      2 2. Indirect rule was a way of exercising colonial power by governing through native leaders, who were given power to deal with legal matters, policing, administration and taxation and overseen by the British authorities. First implemented in India, and experimented in Uganda and later Nigeria in the early twentieth century, indirect rule became the official policy of the British Empire and was extended to its other African colonies during the interwar period.

      3 3. A race‐based policy, promoted by the governor general of French West Africa (AOF), William Ponty, starting in 1909, which relied on chiefdoms to act as intermediaries between the colonial administration and ethnic groups or races henceforth codified in an official taxonomy.

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