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Indirect rule

Indirect rule was a system of governance used by imperial powers to control parts of their empires, particularly used by colonial empires like the British Empire to control their possessions in Africa and Asia, which was done through pre-existing indigenous power structures. Indirect rule was used by various colonial rulers: the French in Algeria and Tunisia, the Dutch in the East Indies, the Portuguese in Angola and Mozambique and the Belgians in Rwanda and Burundi. These dependencies were often called "protectorates" or "trucial states". By this system, the day-to-day government and administration of areas both small and large were left in the hands of traditional rulers, who gained prestige and the stability and protection afforded by the Pax Britannica (in the case of British territories), at the cost of losing control of their external affairs, and often of taxation, communications, and other matters, usually with a small number of European "advisors" effectively overseeing the government of large numbers of people spread over extensive areas.[1]

A 20th century Yoruba (Nigerian) depiction of a British District Officer on tour of indirect rulers

British Empire edit

Some British colonies were ruled directly by the Colonial Office in London, while others were ruled indirectly through local rulers who are supervised behind the scenes by British advisors. In 1890 Zanzibar became a protectorate (not a colony) of Britain. British Prime Minister Salisbury explained his position:

The condition of a protected dependency is more acceptable to the half civilized races, and more suitable for them than direct dominion. It is cheaper, simpler, less wounding to their self-esteem, gives them more career as public officials, and spares of unnecessary contact with white men.[2]

The Princely states of India were also ruled indirectly, with the Indian territories ruled indirectly experiencing similar effects to those in Africa that experienced indirect rule.[3] The same went for many of the West African holdings of the British and French empires.[4]

In Africa edit

The ideological underpinnings, as well as the practical application, of 'indirect rule' in Uganda and Nigeria is usually traced to the work of Frederick Lugard, the High Commissioner of the Protectorate of Northern Nigeria from 1899 to 1906. Indirect rule was by no means a new idea at the time since it had been in use in ruling empires throughout history. For instance, in addition to India and Uganda, it had been practiced in the Songhai and Ashanti Empires.

In the lands of the Sokoto Caliphate, conquered by the British at the turn of the century, Lugard instituted a system whereby external, military, and tax control was operated by the British, while most every other aspect of life was left to local pre-conquest indigenous aristocracies who may have sided with the British during or after their conquest. The theory behind this solution to a very practical problem (a problem referred to as 'The Native Problem' by Mahmood Mamdani in his work Citizen and Subject) of control by a tiny group of foreigners of huge populations is laid out in Lugard's influential work, The Dual Mandate in British Tropical Africa. Lugard copied the numerous empires before his time who had created and developed the indirect rule system.

According to Lugard, Indirect Rule was a political doctrine which held that the Europeans and Africans were culturally different to this extent, Africans had to be ruled through the Africans own institution. To achieve this objective:

  • Chiefs and or Royalty continued to exercise their traditional powers over their subjects;
  • Chiefs were appointed for areas with no chiefs; and
  • Aspects of traditional government repugnant to “European ideas of what constituted government were modified.” e.g. the abolition of human sacrifice.

It has been pointed out that the British were not prepared to pay for colonial administration, though interested in economically benefiting from their new colonies; neither aspect had the British enough resources to finance it. This economic question coupled with the shortage of or lack of European personnel in Africa at the time convinced the British that it would be cheaper to use the traditional institutions to achieve the same objective. The nature and operation of indirect rule in Northern Nigerian, amply confirm these contentions. When Lugard and his men conquered the Sokoto Caliphate of Northern Nigeria, in early twentieth century, his limited resources in terms of men and money, made it impracticable for him to rule the vast territory. Fortunately for him, however, the Sokoto Caliphate already possessed a highly developed and efficient system of administration headed by emirs, with the Sultan of Sokoto as the supreme head. The hierarchical nature of the political structure was ideal for the system of indirect rule because the British could control the emirs and the emirs in turn could control their people.[5]

In the mid-1920s, the British implemented a system of indirect rule in Tanzania.[6]

Practical implementation edit

 
Naaba Koom II, king of the Mossi in French Upper Volta, pictured in 1930. Preservation of precolonial political units was the basis of indirect rule in British and French empires.

Indirect rule was cheaper and easier for the European powers and, in particular, it required fewer administrators, but had a number of problems. In many cases, European authorities empowered local traditional leaders, as in the case of the monarchy of Uganda, but if no suitable leader could be found (in the traditional Western sense of the term), the Europeans would simply choose local rulers to suit them.[7] This was the case in Kenya and Southern Nigeria, and the new leaders, often called "warrant chiefs", were not always supported by the local population. The European ruling classes also often chose local leaders with similar traits to their own, despite these traits not being suited to native leadership. Many were conservative elders, and thus indirect rule fostered a conservative outlook among the indigenous population and marginalised the young intelligentsia. Written laws, which replaced oral laws, were less flexible to the changing social nature, old customs of retribution and justice were removed or banned, and the removal of more violent punishments in some areas led to an increase in crime.[citation needed] Furthermore, leaders empowered by the governments of European powers were often not familiar with their new tasks, such as recruitment and tax.[8]

Interpretations edit

From the early 20th century, French and British writers helped establish a dichotomy between British indirect rule, exemplified by the Indian princely states and by Lugard's writings on the administration of northern Nigeria, and French colonial direct rule. As with British theorists, French colonial officials like Félix Eboué or Robert Delavignette[9] wrote and argued throughout the first half of the 20th century for a distinct French style of rule that was centralized, uniform, and aimed at assimilating colonial subjects into the French polity.[10][11][12] French rule, sometimes labeled Jacobin, was said in these writings to be based on the twin ideologies of the centralized unitary French government of the Metropole, with the French colonial ideology of Assimilation. Colonial Assimilation argued that French law and citizenship was based on universal values that came from the French Revolution. Mirroring French domestic citizenship law, French colonial law allowed for anyone who could prove themselves culturally French (the "Évolués") to become equal French citizens.[13][14][15][16][17] In French West Africa, only parts of the Senegalese "Four Communes" ever extended French citizenship outside a few educated African elite.[18][19]

While making more subtle distinctions, this model of direct versus indirect rule was dominant in academia from the 1930s[20] until the 1970s.[21][22][23]

Academics since the 1970s have problematised the Direct versus Indirect Rule dichotomy,[24] arguing the systems were in practice intermingled in both British and French colonial governance, and that the perception of indirect rule was sometimes promoted to justify quite direct rule structures.[25][26]

Mahmood Mamdani and other academics[27][28] have discussed extensively how both direct and indirect rule were attempts to implement identical goals of foreign rule, but how the "indirect" strategy helped to create ethnic tensions within ruled societies which persist in hostile communal relations and dysfunctional strategies of government.[29][30] Mamdani himself famously described indirect rule as "decentralised despotism".[31]

Some political scientists have even expanded the debate on how direct versus indirect rule experiences continue to affect contemporary governance into how governments which have never experienced being under colonial rule function.[32]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The American Historical Association. "ENGLAND'S INDIRECT RULE IN ITS AFRICAN COLONIES" in THROUGH THE LENS OF HISTORY: BIAFRA, NIGERIA, THE WEST AND THE WORLD. AHA teaching guide, historians.org, n.d. Accessed 2012-09-20 http://www.historians.org/tl/lessonplans/nc/trask/indirect.htm
  2. ^ Andrew Roberts, Salisbury: Victorian Titan (1999) p 529
  3. ^ Lakshmi Iyer, "Direct versus indirect colonial rule in India: Long-term consequences." The Review of Economics and Statistics (2010) 92#4 pp: 693-713 online 2014-09-03 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ Adiele Eberechukwu Afigbo, The Warrant Chiefs: indirect rule in southeastern Nigeria, 1891-1929 (London: Longman, 1972)
  5. ^ Dr. Ofosu-Mensah Ababio Ofosu-Mensah E.A. Gold Mining in Adanse: pre-colonial and modern. Sarbrucken: Lambert Academic Publishing, 2014
  6. ^ Liebenow, J. Gus (1956). "Responses to Planned Political Change in a Tanganyika Tribal Group". American Political Science Review. 50 (2): 447–448. doi:10.2307/1951678. ISSN 0003-0554. JSTOR 1951678. S2CID 144390538.
  7. ^ Eric J. Hobsbawm, Terence O. Ranger, 'The Invention of Tradition' (1983)
  8. ^ Collins and Burns, pp. 297-308
  9. ^ Robert Louis Delavignette. Freedom and Authority in French West Africa. originally published as Les vrais chefs de l'empire: 1939. Oxford University: 1946.
  10. ^ Georges Hardy, Histoire sociale de la colonisation française. (Paris, 1953)
  11. ^ Raymond F. Betts, Assimilation and Association in French Colonial Theory, 1890-1914 (New York, 1961)
  12. ^ Martin D. Lewis, “One Hundred Million Frenchmen: The Assimilationist Theory in French Colonial Policy,” Comparative Studies in Society and History IV (January 1962), 129-153.
  13. ^ Erik Bleich, 'The legacies of history? Colonization and immigrant integration in Britain and France. Theory and Society, Volume 34, Number 2, April 2005.
  14. ^ Michael Crowder' in Senegal: A Study in French Assimilation Policy (London: Oxford University Press, 1962)
  15. ^ Mamadou Diouf, 'The French Colonial Policy of Assimilation and the Civility of the Originaires of the Four Communes (Senegal): A Nineteenth Century Globalization Project' in Development and Change, Volume 29, Number 4, October 1998, pp. 671–696(26)
  16. ^ M. M. Knight, 'French Colonial Policy—the Decline of "Association"' in The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 5, No. 2 (Jun., 1933), pp. 208–224
  17. ^ Michael Lambert, 'From Citizenship to Negritude: Making a difference in elite ideologies of colonized Francophone West Africa' in Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 35, No. 2. (Apr., 1993), pp. 239–262
  18. ^ G. Wesley Johnson, Jr., The Emergence of Black Politics in Senegal: The Struggle for Power in the Four Communes, 1900–1920 (1972)
  19. ^ James F. Searing, 'Senegal: Colonial Period: Four Communes: Dakar, Saint-Louis, Gorée, and Rufisque', in Kevin Shillington (editor), Encyclopedia of African History (New York, 2005): 3 Volumes, 3, 1334–35
  20. ^ Ralph J. Bunche, 'French and British Imperialism in West Africa' in The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 21, No. 1. (Jan., 1936), pp. 31–46
  21. ^ Michael Crowder, 'Indirect Rule: French and British Style' in Africa: Journal of the International African Institute, Vol. 34, No. 3. (Jul., 1964), pp. 197–205
  22. ^ Alec G. Hargreaves, ed. Memory, Empire, and Postcolonialism: Legacies of French Colonialism (Lanham: Lexington Books, 2005; ISBN 9780739108215)
  23. ^ Ann Laura Stoler (1989), 'Rethinking Colonial Categories: European Communities and the Boundaries of Rule' in Comparative Studies in Society and History, 31, pp 134-161 doi:10.1017/S0010417500015693
  24. ^ Jonathan Derrick, 'The 'Native Clerk' in Colonial West Africa' in African Affairs, Vol. 82, No. 326. (Jan., 1983), pp. 61–74.
  25. ^ Emily Lynn Osborn (2003). ‘CIRCLE OF IRON’: AFRICAN COLONIAL EMPLOYEES AND THE INTERPRETATION OF COLONIAL RULE IN FRENCH WEST AFRICA. The Journal of African History, 44, pp 29-50 doi:10.1017/S0021853702008307
  26. ^ Anthony I. Nwabughuogu. The Role of Propaganda in the Development of Indirect Rule in Nigeria, 1890-1929. The International Journal of African Historical Studies Vol. 14, No. 1 (1981), pp. 65-92
  27. ^ Paul Rich. The Origins of Apartheid Ideology: The Case of Ernest Stubbs and Transvaal Native Administration, c.1902-1932. African Affairs, Vol. 79, No. 315. (Apr., 1980), pp. 171–194.
  28. ^ Lakshmi Iyer (2010). Direct versus Indirect Colonial Rule in India: Long-Term Consequences. The Review of Economics and Statistics. November 2010, Vol. 92, No. 4, Pages 693-713
  29. ^ Mahmood Mamdani. Indirect Rule, Civil Society, and Ethnicity: The African Dilemma. Social Justice Vol. 23, No. 1/2 (63-64), The World Today (Spring-Summer 1996), pp. 145-150
  30. ^ Mahmood Mamdani. Historicizing power and responses to power: indirect rule and its reform. Social Research Vol. 66, No. 3, PROSPECTS FOR DEMOCRACY (FALL 1999), pp. 859-886
  31. ^ Mahmood Mamdani, Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism (1996), p. 37.
  32. ^ John Gerring, Daniel Ziblatt, Johan Van Gorp and Julián Arévalo (2011). An Institutional Theory of Direct and Indirect Rule. World Politics, 63, pp 377-433 doi:10.1017/S0043887111000104

Sources and references edit

  • Michael Crowder. Indirect Rule: French and British Style. Africa: Journal of the International African Institute, Vol. 34, No. 3. (Jul., 1964), pp. 197–205.
  • Paul Rich . The Origins of Apartheid Ideology: The Case of Ernest Stubbs and Transvaal Native Administration, c.1902-1932. African Affairs, Vol. 79, No. 315. (Apr., 1980), pp. 171–194.
  • Omipidan Teslim

Indirect Rule in Nigeria OldNaija

  • H. F. Morris . A History of the Adoption of Codes of Criminal Law and Procedure in British Colonial Africa, 1876–1935. Journal of African Law, Vol. 18, No. 1, Criminal Law and Criminology. (Spring, 1974), pp. 6–23.
  • Jonathan Derrick. The 'Native Clerk' in Colonial West Africa. African Affairs, Vol. 82, No. 326. (Jan., 1983), pp. 61–74.
  • Diana Wylie. Confrontation over Kenya: The Colonial Office and Its Critics 1918–1940. The Journal of African History, Vol. 18, No. 3. (1977), pp. 427–447.
  • P. A. Brunt . Empires: Reflections on British and Roman Imperialism. Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 7, No. 3. (Apr., 1965), pp. 267–288.
  • R. O. Collins and J. M. Burns. A History of Sub-Saharan Africa, Cambridge, 2007.
  • Harrington, Jack (2010), Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India, Chs. 4 & 5., New York: Palgrave Macmillan., ISBN 978-0-230-10885-1

Period writings edit

  • Harold Nicolson. The Colonial Problem. International Affairs, Vol. 17, No. 1. (Jan. - Feb., 1938), pp. 32–50.
  • W. E. Rappard . The Practical Working of the Mandates System. Journal of the British Institute of International Affairs, Vol. 4, No. 5. (Sep., 1925), pp. 205–226.
  • Jan Smuts. Native Policy in Africa. Journal of the Royal African Society, Vol. 29, No. 115. (Apr., 1930), pp. 248–268.
  • Ralph J. Bunche . French and British Imperialism in West Africa. The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 21, No. 1. (Jan., 1936), pp. 31–46.

indirect, rule, system, governance, used, imperial, powers, control, parts, their, empires, particularly, used, colonial, empires, like, british, empire, control, their, possessions, africa, asia, which, done, through, existing, indigenous, power, structures, . Indirect rule was a system of governance used by imperial powers to control parts of their empires particularly used by colonial empires like the British Empire to control their possessions in Africa and Asia which was done through pre existing indigenous power structures Indirect rule was used by various colonial rulers the French in Algeria and Tunisia the Dutch in the East Indies the Portuguese in Angola and Mozambique and the Belgians in Rwanda and Burundi These dependencies were often called protectorates or trucial states By this system the day to day government and administration of areas both small and large were left in the hands of traditional rulers who gained prestige and the stability and protection afforded by the Pax Britannica in the case of British territories at the cost of losing control of their external affairs and often of taxation communications and other matters usually with a small number of European advisors effectively overseeing the government of large numbers of people spread over extensive areas 1 A 20th century Yoruba Nigerian depiction of a British District Officer on tour of indirect rulers Contents 1 British Empire 1 1 In Africa 2 Practical implementation 3 Interpretations 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources and references 6 1 Period writingsBritish Empire editSome British colonies were ruled directly by the Colonial Office in London while others were ruled indirectly through local rulers who are supervised behind the scenes by British advisors In 1890 Zanzibar became a protectorate not a colony of Britain British Prime Minister Salisbury explained his position The condition of a protected dependency is more acceptable to the half civilized races and more suitable for them than direct dominion It is cheaper simpler less wounding to their self esteem gives them more career as public officials and spares of unnecessary contact with white men 2 The Princely states of India were also ruled indirectly with the Indian territories ruled indirectly experiencing similar effects to those in Africa that experienced indirect rule 3 The same went for many of the West African holdings of the British and French empires 4 In Africa edit The ideological underpinnings as well as the practical application of indirect rule in Uganda and Nigeria is usually traced to the work of Frederick Lugard the High Commissioner of the Protectorate of Northern Nigeria from 1899 to 1906 Indirect rule was by no means a new idea at the time since it had been in use in ruling empires throughout history For instance in addition to India and Uganda it had been practiced in the Songhai and Ashanti Empires In the lands of the Sokoto Caliphate conquered by the British at the turn of the century Lugard instituted a system whereby external military and tax control was operated by the British while most every other aspect of life was left to local pre conquest indigenous aristocracies who may have sided with the British during or after their conquest The theory behind this solution to a very practical problem a problem referred to as The Native Problem by Mahmood Mamdani in his work Citizen and Subject of control by a tiny group of foreigners of huge populations is laid out in Lugard s influential work The Dual Mandate in British Tropical Africa Lugard copied the numerous empires before his time who had created and developed the indirect rule system According to Lugard Indirect Rule was a political doctrine which held that the Europeans and Africans were culturally different to this extent Africans had to be ruled through the Africans own institution To achieve this objective Chiefs and or Royalty continued to exercise their traditional powers over their subjects Chiefs were appointed for areas with no chiefs and Aspects of traditional government repugnant to European ideas of what constituted government were modified e g the abolition of human sacrifice It has been pointed out that the British were not prepared to pay for colonial administration though interested in economically benefiting from their new colonies neither aspect had the British enough resources to finance it This economic question coupled with the shortage of or lack of European personnel in Africa at the time convinced the British that it would be cheaper to use the traditional institutions to achieve the same objective The nature and operation of indirect rule in Northern Nigerian amply confirm these contentions When Lugard and his men conquered the Sokoto Caliphate of Northern Nigeria in early twentieth century his limited resources in terms of men and money made it impracticable for him to rule the vast territory Fortunately for him however the Sokoto Caliphate already possessed a highly developed and efficient system of administration headed by emirs with the Sultan of Sokoto as the supreme head The hierarchical nature of the political structure was ideal for the system of indirect rule because the British could control the emirs and the emirs in turn could control their people 5 In the mid 1920s the British implemented a system of indirect rule in Tanzania 6 Practical implementation edit nbsp Naaba Koom II king of the Mossi in French Upper Volta pictured in 1930 Preservation of precolonial political units was the basis of indirect rule in British and French empires Indirect rule was cheaper and easier for the European powers and in particular it required fewer administrators but had a number of problems In many cases European authorities empowered local traditional leaders as in the case of the monarchy of Uganda but if no suitable leader could be found in the traditional Western sense of the term the Europeans would simply choose local rulers to suit them 7 This was the case in Kenya and Southern Nigeria and the new leaders often called warrant chiefs were not always supported by the local population The European ruling classes also often chose local leaders with similar traits to their own despite these traits not being suited to native leadership Many were conservative elders and thus indirect rule fostered a conservative outlook among the indigenous population and marginalised the young intelligentsia Written laws which replaced oral laws were less flexible to the changing social nature old customs of retribution and justice were removed or banned and the removal of more violent punishments in some areas led to an increase in crime citation needed Furthermore leaders empowered by the governments of European powers were often not familiar with their new tasks such as recruitment and tax 8 Interpretations editFrom the early 20th century French and British writers helped establish a dichotomy between British indirect rule exemplified by the Indian princely states and by Lugard s writings on the administration of northern Nigeria and French colonial direct rule As with British theorists French colonial officials like Felix Eboue or Robert Delavignette 9 wrote and argued throughout the first half of the 20th century for a distinct French style of rule that was centralized uniform and aimed at assimilating colonial subjects into the French polity 10 11 12 French rule sometimes labeled Jacobin was said in these writings to be based on the twin ideologies of the centralized unitary French government of the Metropole with the French colonial ideology of Assimilation Colonial Assimilation argued that French law and citizenship was based on universal values that came from the French Revolution Mirroring French domestic citizenship law French colonial law allowed for anyone who could prove themselves culturally French the Evolues to become equal French citizens 13 14 15 16 17 In French West Africa only parts of the Senegalese Four Communes ever extended French citizenship outside a few educated African elite 18 19 While making more subtle distinctions this model of direct versus indirect rule was dominant in academia from the 1930s 20 until the 1970s 21 22 23 Academics since the 1970s have problematised the Direct versus Indirect Rule dichotomy 24 arguing the systems were in practice intermingled in both British and French colonial governance and that the perception of indirect rule was sometimes promoted to justify quite direct rule structures 25 26 Mahmood Mamdani and other academics 27 28 have discussed extensively how both direct and indirect rule were attempts to implement identical goals of foreign rule but how the indirect strategy helped to create ethnic tensions within ruled societies which persist in hostile communal relations and dysfunctional strategies of government 29 30 Mamdani himself famously described indirect rule as decentralised despotism 31 Some political scientists have even expanded the debate on how direct versus indirect rule experiences continue to affect contemporary governance into how governments which have never experienced being under colonial rule function 32 See also edit nbsp British Empire portal nbsp Politics portalBussa revolt a 1915 uprising against indirect rule in Northern Nigeria Direct colonial rule Analysis of Western European colonialism and colonization NeocolonialismReferences edit The American Historical Association ENGLAND S INDIRECT RULE IN ITS AFRICAN COLONIES in THROUGH THE LENS OF HISTORY BIAFRA NIGERIA THE WEST AND THE WORLD AHA teaching guide historians org n d Accessed 2012 09 20 http www historians org tl lessonplans nc trask indirect htm Andrew Roberts Salisbury Victorian Titan 1999 p 529 Lakshmi Iyer Direct versus indirect colonial rule in India Long term consequences The Review of Economics and Statistics 2010 92 4 pp 693 713 online Archived 2014 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Adiele Eberechukwu Afigbo The Warrant Chiefs indirect rule in southeastern Nigeria 1891 1929 London Longman 1972 Dr Ofosu Mensah Ababio Ofosu Mensah E A Gold Mining in Adanse pre colonial and modern Sarbrucken Lambert Academic Publishing 2014 Liebenow J Gus 1956 Responses to Planned Political Change in a Tanganyika Tribal Group American Political Science Review 50 2 447 448 doi 10 2307 1951678 ISSN 0003 0554 JSTOR 1951678 S2CID 144390538 Eric J Hobsbawm Terence O Ranger The Invention of Tradition 1983 Collins and Burns pp 297 308 Robert Louis Delavignette Freedom and Authority in French West Africa originally published as Les vrais chefs de l empire 1939 Oxford University 1946 Georges Hardy Histoire sociale de la colonisation francaise Paris 1953 Raymond F Betts Assimilation and Association in French Colonial Theory 1890 1914 New York 1961 Martin D Lewis One Hundred Million Frenchmen The Assimilationist Theory in French Colonial Policy Comparative Studies in Society and History IV January 1962 129 153 Erik Bleich The legacies of history Colonization and immigrant integration in Britain and France Theory and Society Volume 34 Number 2 April 2005 Michael Crowder in Senegal A Study in French Assimilation Policy London Oxford University Press 1962 Mamadou Diouf The French Colonial Policy of Assimilation and the Civility of the Originaires of the Four Communes Senegal A Nineteenth Century Globalization Project in Development and Change Volume 29 Number 4 October 1998 pp 671 696 26 M M Knight French Colonial Policy the Decline of Association in The Journal of Modern History Vol 5 No 2 Jun 1933 pp 208 224 Michael Lambert From Citizenship to Negritude Making a difference in elite ideologies of colonized Francophone West Africa in Comparative Studies in Society and History Vol 35 No 2 Apr 1993 pp 239 262 G Wesley Johnson Jr The Emergence of Black Politics in Senegal The Struggle for Power in the Four Communes 1900 1920 1972 James F Searing Senegal Colonial Period Four Communes Dakar Saint Louis Goree and Rufisque in Kevin Shillington editor Encyclopedia of African History New York 2005 3 Volumes 3 1334 35 Ralph J Bunche French and British Imperialism in West Africa in The Journal of Negro History Vol 21 No 1 Jan 1936 pp 31 46 Michael Crowder Indirect Rule French and British Style in Africa Journal of the International African Institute Vol 34 No 3 Jul 1964 pp 197 205 Alec G Hargreaves ed Memory Empire and Postcolonialism Legacies of French Colonialism Lanham Lexington Books 2005 ISBN 9780739108215 Ann Laura Stoler 1989 Rethinking Colonial Categories European Communities and the Boundaries of Rule in Comparative Studies in Society and History 31 pp 134 161 doi 10 1017 S0010417500015693 Jonathan Derrick The Native Clerk in Colonial West Africa in African Affairs Vol 82 No 326 Jan 1983 pp 61 74 Emily Lynn Osborn 2003 CIRCLE OF IRON AFRICAN COLONIAL EMPLOYEES AND THE INTERPRETATION OF COLONIAL RULE IN FRENCH WEST AFRICA The Journal of African History 44 pp 29 50 doi 10 1017 S0021853702008307 Anthony I Nwabughuogu The Role of Propaganda in the Development of Indirect Rule in Nigeria 1890 1929 The International Journal of African Historical Studies Vol 14 No 1 1981 pp 65 92 Paul Rich The Origins of Apartheid Ideology The Case of Ernest Stubbs and Transvaal Native Administration c 1902 1932 African Affairs Vol 79 No 315 Apr 1980 pp 171 194 Lakshmi Iyer 2010 Direct versus Indirect Colonial Rule in India Long Term Consequences The Review of Economics and Statistics November 2010 Vol 92 No 4 Pages 693 713 Mahmood Mamdani Indirect Rule Civil Society and Ethnicity The African Dilemma Social Justice Vol 23 No 1 2 63 64 The World Today Spring Summer 1996 pp 145 150 Mahmood Mamdani Historicizing power and responses to power indirect rule and its reform Social Research Vol 66 No 3 PROSPECTS FOR DEMOCRACY FALL 1999 pp 859 886 Mahmood Mamdani Citizen and Subject Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism 1996 p 37 John Gerring Daniel Ziblatt Johan Van Gorp and Julian Arevalo 2011 An Institutional Theory of Direct and Indirect Rule World Politics 63 pp 377 433 doi 10 1017 S0043887111000104 This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sources and references editMichael Crowder Indirect Rule French and British Style Africa Journal of the International African Institute Vol 34 No 3 Jul 1964 pp 197 205 Paul Rich The Origins of Apartheid Ideology The Case of Ernest Stubbs and Transvaal Native Administration c 1902 1932 African Affairs Vol 79 No 315 Apr 1980 pp 171 194 Omipidan TeslimIndirect Rule in Nigeria OldNaija H F Morris A History of the Adoption of Codes of Criminal Law and Procedure in British Colonial Africa 1876 1935 Journal of African Law Vol 18 No 1 Criminal Law and Criminology Spring 1974 pp 6 23 Jonathan Derrick The Native Clerk in Colonial West Africa African Affairs Vol 82 No 326 Jan 1983 pp 61 74 Diana Wylie Confrontation over Kenya The Colonial Office and Its Critics 1918 1940 The Journal of African History Vol 18 No 3 1977 pp 427 447 P A Brunt Empires Reflections on British and Roman Imperialism Comparative Studies in Society and History Vol 7 No 3 Apr 1965 pp 267 288 R O Collins and J M Burns A History of Sub Saharan Africa Cambridge 2007 Harrington Jack 2010 Sir John Malcolm and the Creation of British India Chs 4 amp 5 New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 10885 1Period writings edit Harold Nicolson The Colonial Problem International Affairs Vol 17 No 1 Jan Feb 1938 pp 32 50 W E Rappard The Practical Working of the Mandates System Journal of the British Institute of International Affairs Vol 4 No 5 Sep 1925 pp 205 226 Jan Smuts Native Policy in Africa Journal of the Royal African Society Vol 29 No 115 Apr 1930 pp 248 268 Ralph J Bunche French and British Imperialism in West Africa The Journal of Negro History Vol 21 No 1 Jan 1936 pp 31 46 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indirect rule amp oldid 1203621725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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