Crises of Legitimacy and Political Violence in Colonial Uganda, 1890–1962

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Abstract

K.W. Grundy and M.A. Weinstein noted how imperialism normalizes and justifies political violence against the target population: Beyond the double-morality…is the idea that one’s own group has a civilizing mission with respect to other groups. This civilizing mission involves the notion that one’s own group has a duty to impose its normative order on other peoples..The view that some people have a civilizing mission became widespread in the nineteenth century as a justification for imperialism..The major justification of violence in the expansionist ideology is that it functions to facilitate the domination of a superior group over an inferior group.. In an expansionist’s ideology violence against the inferior is justified as a right and in some instances even the duty of the superior.

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Otunnu, O. (2016). Crises of Legitimacy and Political Violence in Colonial Uganda, 1890–1962. In African Histories and Modernities (pp. 71–155). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-33156-0_3

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