This paper examines how imperial travel of British academics shaped the production of knowledge and colonial policy from the 1880s to the 1960s. It employs an innovative, archive based methodology that examines the changing geographies of all recorded academic travel from the University of Cambridge in conjunction with the extensive overseas journeys of Sir Frank Leonard Engledow, Drapers’ Professor of Agriculture from 1930 to 1957 and a key advisor to the Colonial Office on tropical agriculture. Drawing on recent work in geography and science studies, this study outlines how scientific expertise was increasingly sought by colonial governments at the eve of decolonisation due to a lack of scientific infrastructure and growing social upheava...
This book produces a major rethinking of the history of development after 1940 through an exploratio...
Is there an academic–policy divide, and does that gap need to be bridged? For decades, International...
PhD ThesisDuring the nineteenth century, when the British Empire was nearing its peak in terms of t...
This paper examines how imperial travel of British academics shaped the production of knowledge and ...
The University of Cambridge, academic expertise, and the British Empire, 1885–196
This paper examines how imperial travel of British academics shaped the production of knowledge and ...
This article considers the role of overseas academic travel in the development of the modern researc...
This paper draws attention to academic travel as a key issue in the geographies of knowledge, scienc...
The aftermath of imperial Britain is entwined with every part of the United Kingdom (UK). Colonial d...
© 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis GroupThis article takes the formation and wor...
This thesis is a study of colonialism and the university, and the relationship between knowledge, im...
This thesis traces the history of Anglo-Australian racial science between 1850 and 1960, and examine...
By focusing on the example of scholars working and travelling within the British Empire, this essay ...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
This book produces a major rethinking of the history of development after 1940 through an exploratio...
Is there an academic–policy divide, and does that gap need to be bridged? For decades, International...
PhD ThesisDuring the nineteenth century, when the British Empire was nearing its peak in terms of t...
This paper examines how imperial travel of British academics shaped the production of knowledge and ...
The University of Cambridge, academic expertise, and the British Empire, 1885–196
This paper examines how imperial travel of British academics shaped the production of knowledge and ...
This article considers the role of overseas academic travel in the development of the modern researc...
This paper draws attention to academic travel as a key issue in the geographies of knowledge, scienc...
The aftermath of imperial Britain is entwined with every part of the United Kingdom (UK). Colonial d...
© 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis GroupThis article takes the formation and wor...
This thesis is a study of colonialism and the university, and the relationship between knowledge, im...
This thesis traces the history of Anglo-Australian racial science between 1850 and 1960, and examine...
By focusing on the example of scholars working and travelling within the British Empire, this essay ...
This thesis examines two selections of published travel writings produced between 1816 and 1831, ana...
Few geographers wrote explicitly about decolonisation. Yet the ends of empires wrought substantial c...
This book produces a major rethinking of the history of development after 1940 through an exploratio...
Is there an academic–policy divide, and does that gap need to be bridged? For decades, International...
PhD ThesisDuring the nineteenth century, when the British Empire was nearing its peak in terms of t...