scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

A modern history of Tanganyika

John Iliffe
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors present a list of maps and tables for the history of Tanganyika in terms of intention, intention, intent, and intention, and the creation of tribes.
Abstract
List of maps and tables Preface Acknowledgements Terminology Abbreviations 1. Intentions 2. Tanganyika in 1800 3. The nineteenth century 4. The German conquest 5. Colonial economy and ecological crisis, 1890-1914 6. The Maji Maji rebellion, 1905-7 7. Religious and cultural change before 1914 8. Fortunes of war 9. The origins of rural capitalism 10. The creation of tribes 11. The crisis of colonial society, 1929-45 12. Townsmen and workers 13. The African Association, 1929-48 14. The new colonialism 15. The new politics, 1945-55 16. The nationalist victory, 1955-61 Bibliography Index.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Constructing Ethnicity: Creating and Recreating Ethnic Identity and Culture

TL;DR: The authors developed a model of ethnicity that stresses the fluid, situational, volitional, and dynamic character of ethnic identification, organization, and action, emphasizing the socially constructed aspects of ethnicity, that is, the ways in which ethnic boundaries, identities, and cultures are negotiated, defined, and produced through social interaction inside and outside ethnic communities.
Posted Content

Power, distortions, revolt, and reform in agricultural land relations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine how these power relations emerged and what legal means enabled relatively few landowners to accumulate and hold on to large landholdings, and discuss the main policy issues and implications of various distortions and successful and unsuccessful reforms in the developing world, including land registration and titling, land taxation, regulations restricting land sales and rentals, fragmentation and consolidation of land, redistributive land reform, and decollectivization.
Book

The miombo in transition: Woodlands and welfare in Africa

TL;DR: The Miombo in Transition is a resource for researchers, with over 250 pages reviewing and synthesising over 400 studies as mentioned in this paper, which is used to identify key issues for research and facilitate formulation of new management strategies, policies and institutions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The imperialism of decolonization

TL;DR: In this paper, the imperialism of decolonization is discussed and discussed in the context of the Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History: Vol. 22, No. 3, pp. 462-511.
Journal ArticleDOI

Struggles for control: the social roots of health and healing in modern Africa.

TL;DR: A general interpretation of the social determinants of health and health care in Africa over the past century is presented, finding that healers of all kinds have been less influential than the authors commonly think in shaping states of health or in healing the sick.