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Journal ArticleDOI

French Policy and the Origins of the Scramble for West Africa

C. W. Newbury, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1969 - 
- Vol. 10, Iss: 2, pp 253-276
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TLDR
The origins of the scramble for West Africa are discussed in this paper, where the authors argue that the crucial change in French African policy occurred not in 1882-3, as commonly assumed, but in 1879-80.
Abstract
This paper is a contribution to the current debate about the origins of the scramble for West Africa. It analyses the internal dynamics of French expansion and argues that the crucial change in French African policy occurred not in 1882–3, as commonly assumed, but in 1879–80. The policies adopted at this time, although their roots can be traced back to the governorship of Louis Faidherbe in Senegal, were distinguished by a new willingness on the part of the government in Paris to establish political as well as economic claims to West African territory, and by its readiness to bear the financial and military burdens of territorial expansion. Changes in French domestic politics or foreign relations cannot adequately account for this transition from informal to formal expansion, nor can it be explained solely in terms of commercial agitation in France or West Africa. The influence of public opinion and of colonial agents on the formulation of policy was more significant, but the crucial decisions were taken by the policy-makers themselves, and in particular by Charles de Freycinet (Minister of Public Works and later Prime Minister) and Admiral Jean Jaureguiberry (Minister of Marine and Colonies). They, above all, were responsible for inaugurating the era of French imperialism in West Africa. The new imperialism was most apparent in the drive to create a vast territorial empire in the Sudanese interior. But it was also evident in the intensification of commercial rivalries along the West African coast, and the paper argues that French actions there in 1882–3 were the continuation of policies adopted three years before rather than immediate responses to the British occupation of Egypt or to the growth of popular support for African expansion. Accordingly, the beginnings of French imperialism in West Africa are advanced as the principal cause of the scramble.

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Citations
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Africa and the World Economy

TL;DR: The question of whether Africa's involvement in the changing world economy has led Africans along a road toward material and social progress or into a dead end is very much in dispute as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Victorians and Africa: A Reconsideration of the Occupation of Egypt, 1882

TL;DR: A reassessment of Britain's decision to occupy Egypt in 1882 has been conducted by as discussed by the authors, who argued that the causes of intervention lay in the metropole rather than on the periphery of the country.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social and Economic Factors in the Muslim Revolution in Senegambia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the way in which events during and, in some cases, before the nineteenth century shaped modern Senegambian society and conclude that the slave trade contributed to the development of military structures and to the polarization between a warrior elite and an industrious Muslim peasant population.

An Economic Rationale for the African Scramble. The Commercial Transition and the Commodity Price Boom of 1845-1885. NBER Working Paper 21213

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a unified quantitative account of African commodity trade in the long 19th century from the zenith of the Atlantic slave trade (1790s) to the eve of World War II (1939).
Journal ArticleDOI

V. The French ‘Colonial Party’: Its Composition, Aims And Influence, 1885–1914 *

TL;DR: For most of the 1880s the French public had seemed at best indifferent, at worst violently hostile to colonial expansion, and even the moderate Republicans felt obliged to condemn the politique d'aventures which they had previously supported as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a history of the partition of Africa

TL;DR: The partition of Africa is one of those historical processes which have been more discussed than studied as mentioned in this paper, and most writers on the subject have clear views about the historical significance of the whole process; whether they regard it as a beneficent extension of the institutions and values of West European civilization or an intolerable imposition of alien power, their evaluations derive from prior convictions rather than from empirical study.