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Böcker i Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies Series-serien

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  • - Insurgent Peoples in World History
     
    930,-

    This volume offers a critical re-examination of colonial and anti-colonial resistance imageries and practices in imperial history. It explores how to read and (de)code these issues in archival documents - and how to conjugate documental approaches with oral history, indigenous memories, and international histories of empire.

  • - The Crown as Head of State in Political Crises in the Postwar Commonwealth
     
    1 826,-

    This book examines how the Crown has performed as Head of State across the UK and post war Commonwealth during times of political crisis. It explores the little-known relationships, powers and imperial legacies regarding modern heads of state in parliamentary regimes where so many decisions occur without parliamentary or public scrutiny.

  •  
    1 616,-

    This edited collection draws together new historical writing on the Commonwealth. It features the work of younger scholars, as well as established academics, and highlights themes such as law and sovereignty, republicanism and the monarchy, French engagement with the Commonwealth, the anti-apartheid struggle, race and immigration, memory and commemoration, and banking. The volume focusses less on the Commonwealth as an institution than on the relevance and meaning of the Commonwealth to its member countries and peoples. By adopting oblique, de-centred, approaches to Commonwealth history, unusual or overlooked connections are brought to the fore while old problems are looked at from fresh vantage points ¿ be this turning points like the relationship between ¿old¿ and `new¿ Commonwealth members from 1949, or the distinctive roles of major figures like Jawaharlal Nehru or Jan Smuts. The volume thereby aims to refresh interest in Commonwealth history as a field of comparative international history.

  • av Ellen R. Feingold
    1 176 - 1 670,-

    This book is the first study of the development and decolonization of a British colonial high court in Africa. Colonial Justice and Decolonization in the High Court of Tanzania is a powerful reminder of the crucial roles played by common law courts in the operation and legitimization of both colonial and post-colonial states.

  • - Unsettling News in Australia and Britain, 1863-1902
    av Sam Hutchinson
    1 036 - 1 350,-

    This book explores how public commentary framed Australian involvement in the Waikato War (1863-64), the Sudan crisis (1885), and the South African War (1899-1902), a succession of conflicts that reverberated around the British Empire and which the newspaper press reported at length.

  • av Peter Brooke
    956 - 1 256,-

    This book throws new light on the impact of informal 'old boy' networks on British decolonisation. He was also a key figure in the Harold Macmillan's 'Winds of Change' policy of decolonisation, serving as Secretary for the Colonies and Commonwealth Relations from 1960 to 1964.

  • - Empire of Dissent
    av Valerie Wallace
    1 826,-

    This book offers a new interpretation of political reform in the settler colonies of Britain's empire in the early nineteenth century. It re-evaluates five notorious Scottish reformers and unpacks the Presbyterian foundation to their political ideas: Thomas Pringle (1789-1834), a poet in Cape Town;

  • - Equilibrium in the New World
    av Edward Shawcross
    1 826,-

    This book explores French imperialism in Latin America in the nineteenth century, taking Mexico as a case study.

  • - Frontier Violence, Affective Performances, and Imaginative Refoundings
    av Penelope Edmonds
    440 - 1 110,-

    This book examines the performative life reconciliation and its discontents in settler societies.

  • av Robert McNamara & Filipe Ribeiro de Meneses
    1 390 - 1 670,-

    This work examines the attempt by the governments of Portugal, Rhodesia and South Africa to defy the drive for African independence in the 1960s and 70s, and the international community's response.

  • av Gerard Farrell
    1 670,-

    Central to this argument is that the Ulster plantation bears more comparisons to European expansion throughout the Atlantic than (as some historians have argued) the early-modern state's consolidation of control over its peripheral territories.

  • - Beyond Neo-Colonialism
    av Poppy Cullen
    1 506 - 1 510,-

    This book explores British post-colonial foreign policy towards Kenya from 1963 to 1980.

  • - Central America, Southeast Asia, the Caucasus
    av Nicholas Tarling
    896,-

  • - Tradition, Governance and Legacy
    av Soren Rud
    1 506,-

    This book explores how the Danish authorities governed the colonized population in Greenland in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

  • - A Migrant Community in A Multiethnic State
    av Yi Li
    948,99 - 1 336,-

    Using previously unexplored archives from colonial institutions and individuals, and primary materials produced by the Burmese Chinese, this comprehensive study investigates over a century of history of the Burmese Chinese under British colonial rule.

  • - The Forgotten History
    av Anna Greenwood & Harshad Topiwala
    796 - 1 016,-

    This ground-breaking book offers unique insights into the careers of Indian doctors in colonial Kenya during the height of British colonialism, between 1895 and 1940. The story of these important Indian professionals presents a rare social history of an important political minority.

  • av Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo & Antonio Costa-Pinto
    1 506 - 1 666,-

    This book provides an historical, critical analysis of the doctrine of 'civilising mission' in Portuguese colonialism in the crucial period from 1870 to 1930. Exploring international contexts and transnational connections, this 'civilising mission' is analysed and assessed by examining the employment and distribution of African manpower.

  • av Jerome Teelucksingh
    796,-

    This book provides evidence that Labour in Trinidad and Tobago played a vital role in undermining British colonialism and advocating for federation and self-government. Furthermore, there is emphasis on the pioneering efforts of the Labour movement in party politics, social justice, and working class solidarity.

  • av G. Barton
    820 - 1 000,-

    Informal empire is a key mechanism of control that explains much of the configuration of the modern world. This book traces the broad outline of westernization through elite formations around the world in the modern era. It explains why the world is western and how formal empire describes only the tip of the iceberg of British and American power.

  • - Race, Violence, and Global Spectacle
    av R. Bright
    796 - 820,-

    This book explores the decision of the British Empire to import Chinese labour to southern Africa despite the already tense racial situation in the region. It enables a clearer understanding of racial and political developments in southern Africa during the reconstruction period and places localised issues within a wider historiography.

  • - Regulating Consumption in British Burma
    av A. Wright
    1 506,-

    This study investigates the connections between opium policy and imperialism in Burma. It examines what influenced the imperial regime's opium policy decisions, such as racial ideologies, the necessity of articulating a convincing rationale for British governance, and Burma's position in multiple imperial and transnational networks.

  • - Medicine, the Military and the Making of Colonial India, 1780-1868
    av Erica Wald
    796 - 820,-

    This book examines the colonial state's approach to venereal disease and 'vice'-driven health risks in the first half of the nineteenth century. Further, it shows that these decisions had wide-ranging and often surprising consequences not simply for the army itself, but for India and the empire more broadly. Shortlisted for the 2014 Templer Award.

  • - The Kariba Dam Scheme in the Central African Federation
    av Julia Tischler
    1 666 - 1 690,-

    'Modernisation' was one of the most pervasive ideologies of the twentieth century. Focusing on a case study of the Kariba Dam in central-southern Africa and based on an array of primary sources and interviews the book provides a nuanced understanding of development in the turbulent late 1950s, a time when most colonies moved towards independence.

  • - Corruption in Burma c.1900
    av J. Saha
    796,-

    In this original study British rule in Burma is examined through quotidian acts of corruption. Saha outlines a novel way to study the colonial state as it was experienced in everyday life, revealing a complex world of state practices where legality and illegality were inseparable: the informal world upon which formal colonial power rested.

  • av Bronwen Everill
    1 666 - 1 826,-

    Bronwen Everill offers a new perspective on African global history, applying a comparative approach to freed slave settlers in Sierra Leone and Liberia to understand their role in the anti-slavery colonization movements of Britain and America.

  • - India, Eastern Africa and the Middle East, 1858-1947
    av Robert J. Blyth
    2 140,-

    British India, as a result of history, geopolitics and its unique status within the Empire, controlled a chain of overseas agencies that stretched from southern Persia to eastern Africa.

  • - Policy-Making and the Perception of Risk
    av Sandhya L. Polu
    680 - 796,-

    Using case studies of cholera, plague, malaria, and yellow fever, this book analyzes how factors such as public health diplomacy, trade, imperial governance, medical technologies, and cultural norms operated within global and colonial conceptions of political and epidemiological risk to shape infectious disease policies in colonial India.

  • av Kit Candlin
    1 506,-

    The Southern Caribbean was the last frontier in the Atlantic world and the most contested region in the Caribbean during the Age of Revolution. As well as illuminating this little-understood region, the book seeks to complicate our understanding of the Caribbean, the role of 'free people of colour' and the nature of slavery.

  • - Negotiating Otherness in the British Empire, 1840-1900
    av Esme Cleall
    680 - 796,-

    Missionary Discourse examines missionary writings from India and southern Africa to explore colonial discourses about race, religion, gender and culture. The book is organised around three themes: family, sickness and violence, which were key areas of missionary concern, and important axes around which colonial difference was forged.

  • av Jonathan Curry-Machado
    796,-

    The papers presented in this collection offer a wide range of cases, from Asia, Africa and the Americas, and broadly cover the last two centuries, in which commodities have led to the consolidation of a globalised economy and society - forging this out of distinctive local experiences of cultivation and production, and regional circuits of trade.

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