This article takes the formation and work of the ‘Elliot’ Commission on Higher Education in West Africa (1943–45) to reconsider the roots of British colonial development. Late colonial universities were major development projects, although they have rarely been considered as such. Focusing particularly on the Nigerian experience and the controversy over Yaba Higher College (founded 1934), the article contends that late colonial plans for universities were not produced in Britain and then exported to West African colonies. Rather, they were formed through interactions between agendas and ideas with roots in West Africa, Britain and elsewhere. These debates exhibited asymmetries of power but produced some consensus about university developmen...
This thesis is a study of colonialism and the university, and the relationship between knowledge, im...
West Africans have a long history of investing in their children’s education by sending them to Brit...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...
© 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis GroupThis article takes the formation and wor...
This article takes the formation and work of the ‘Elliot’ Commission on Higher Education in West Afr...
This thesis examines the infrastructure behind the academic discipline of African History. By lookin...
This thesis is a study of Nigerian universities in the global age of development. It focuses on thre...
Many African scholars feel that there is a need for a re-focusing of goals and purpose among univers...
Nigeria’s independence ushered in an era of university creation. Four new universities were establis...
The decolonial departure point of this article is that every human being is born into a valid and le...
The paper examines the complex historical processes that culminated in the founding of modern Nigeri...
Throughout the African continent, albeit a product of imperial domination, every state at independen...
The educational legacy of colonialism in Nigeria is a contested and controversial subject. What do t...
The aftermath of imperial Britain is entwined with every part of the United Kingdom (UK). Colonial d...
This dissertation is a study of British theater, publishing, and broadcasting in East and West Afric...
This thesis is a study of colonialism and the university, and the relationship between knowledge, im...
West Africans have a long history of investing in their children’s education by sending them to Brit...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...
© 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis GroupThis article takes the formation and wor...
This article takes the formation and work of the ‘Elliot’ Commission on Higher Education in West Afr...
This thesis examines the infrastructure behind the academic discipline of African History. By lookin...
This thesis is a study of Nigerian universities in the global age of development. It focuses on thre...
Many African scholars feel that there is a need for a re-focusing of goals and purpose among univers...
Nigeria’s independence ushered in an era of university creation. Four new universities were establis...
The decolonial departure point of this article is that every human being is born into a valid and le...
The paper examines the complex historical processes that culminated in the founding of modern Nigeri...
Throughout the African continent, albeit a product of imperial domination, every state at independen...
The educational legacy of colonialism in Nigeria is a contested and controversial subject. What do t...
The aftermath of imperial Britain is entwined with every part of the United Kingdom (UK). Colonial d...
This dissertation is a study of British theater, publishing, and broadcasting in East and West Afric...
This thesis is a study of colonialism and the university, and the relationship between knowledge, im...
West Africans have a long history of investing in their children’s education by sending them to Brit...
Prior, to I945, neither the majority of British nor Africans were convinced that Western parliamenta...