Abstract
The history of decolonization is usually written backward, as if the end-point (a world of juridically equivalent nation-states) was known from the start. But the routes out of colonial empire appear more varied. Some Africans sought equal rights within empire, others to federate among themselves; some sought independence. In London or Paris, officials realized they had to reform colonial empires, but not necessarily give them up. The idea of “development” became a way to assert that empires could be made both more productive and more legitimate. Frederick Cooper explores how these alternative possibilities narrowed between 1945 and approximately 1960.
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CITATION STYLE
Cooper, F. (2022). Out of Empire. Redefining Africa’s Place in the World. In Out of Empire (pp. 5–30). V&R unipress. https://doi.org/10.14220/9783737000970.5
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