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Africa as a Living Laboratory: Empire, Development, and the Problem of Scientific Knowledge, 1870-1950

Helen Tilley
TLDR
Tilley's "Africa as a Living Laboratory" as mentioned in this paper explores the relationship between imperialism and the role of scientific expertise in the colonisation of British Africa, arguing that the aim of British colonialists was to transform and modernize Africa, but their efforts were often unexpectedly subverted by scientific concerns with the local.
Abstract
Tropical Africa was one of the last regions of the world to experience formal European colonialism, a process that coincided with the advent of a range of new scientific specialties and research methods. "Africa as a Living Laboratory" is an ambitious study of the thorny relationship between imperialism and the role of scientific expertise - environmental, medical, racial, and anthropological - in the colonization of British Africa. A key source for Helen Tilley's analysis is the African Research Survey, a project undertaken in the 1930s to explore how modern science was being applied to African problems. This project both embraced and recommended an interdisciplinary approach to research on Africa that, Tilley argues, underscored the heterogeneity of African environments and the interrelation of the problems being studied. While the aim of British colonialists was unquestionably to transform and modernize Africa, their efforts, Tilley contends, were often unexpectedly subverted by scientific concerns with the local. Meticulously researched and gracefully argued, "Africa as a Living Laboratory" transforms our understanding of imperial history, colonial development, and the role science played in both.

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A Complete Bibliography of Publications in Isis, 2000{2009

TL;DR: Thematiche [38].
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Susan Parnell
- 01 Feb 2016 - 
TL;DR: A historical view of the Habitat process reveals that even at the global scale it is possible for those with strong convictions to change the normative base and mode of working on urban issues, but that the compromise politics of the international system also masks important compromises and contradictions.
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TL;DR: Gabrielle Hecht as discussed by the authors put Africa in the nuclear world, and the nuclear worlds in Africa, focusing on miners and the occupational hazard of radiation exposure, and showed that questions about being nuclear lie at the heart of today's global nuclear order and the relationships between developing nations and nuclear powers.
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Public secrets in public health : knowing not to know while making scientific knowledge

TL;DR: In this article, a large transnational field research site in Africa is described, where unknowing pertains to vital material inequalities across the relations of scientific production, and these inequalities are open to experience but remain often unacknowledged in public speech and scientific texts.