This chapter considers the construction of the notion of decolonization in the context of national political cultures. It seeks to explore the question: What was the role of cultural prejudices and preferences in the end of the three biggest European colonial empires in Africa? Answers will be provided by tracing the impact of some explicit and recurrent cultural prejudices at the level of senior decision makers and officials in comparing British, French, and Portuguese decolonization. It is not possible to show unequivocally here the decisive role of political culture in decolonization. My aim is simply to present arguments and evidence from some relevant sources that it did play an important role in both setting the pace and hel...
This introductory chapter provides the context for Cultures of Decolonisation by offering a theoreti...
Italy lost its empire during the World War II, and its former colonies gained independence through a...
Abstract Assimiles or African patriots? The Emergence of Cultural Nationalisai in French-speaking Af...
This chapter considers the construction of the notion of decolonization in the context of national ...
The central role in Portuguese political culture of the identification of Portugal as a colonizing ...
European colonialisms (circa. Late 1400) are complex, particularized, and changing political-economi...
The parts of the British Empire on which the sun never set were nonetheless surrounded by the coloni...
By the late twentieth century, both France and Great Britain achieved a similar status as economical...
European colonial powers invaded and then dominated a large part of the African continent from the s...
European colonial powers invaded and then dominated a large part of the African continent from the s...
European colonial powers invaded and then dominated a large part of the African continent from the s...
ABSTRACT: This paper argues that metropolitan political theories and institutions grounded in popula...
This Bachelor thesis deals with the analysis and comparison of the causes, processes and consequence...
Decolonization, a word that belongs majorly to the 1960’s and perhaps one of the most important even...
It has been over sixty (60) years since decolonization in Africa. In years gone by, a pattern has em...
This introductory chapter provides the context for Cultures of Decolonisation by offering a theoreti...
Italy lost its empire during the World War II, and its former colonies gained independence through a...
Abstract Assimiles or African patriots? The Emergence of Cultural Nationalisai in French-speaking Af...
This chapter considers the construction of the notion of decolonization in the context of national ...
The central role in Portuguese political culture of the identification of Portugal as a colonizing ...
European colonialisms (circa. Late 1400) are complex, particularized, and changing political-economi...
The parts of the British Empire on which the sun never set were nonetheless surrounded by the coloni...
By the late twentieth century, both France and Great Britain achieved a similar status as economical...
European colonial powers invaded and then dominated a large part of the African continent from the s...
European colonial powers invaded and then dominated a large part of the African continent from the s...
European colonial powers invaded and then dominated a large part of the African continent from the s...
ABSTRACT: This paper argues that metropolitan political theories and institutions grounded in popula...
This Bachelor thesis deals with the analysis and comparison of the causes, processes and consequence...
Decolonization, a word that belongs majorly to the 1960’s and perhaps one of the most important even...
It has been over sixty (60) years since decolonization in Africa. In years gone by, a pattern has em...
This introductory chapter provides the context for Cultures of Decolonisation by offering a theoreti...
Italy lost its empire during the World War II, and its former colonies gained independence through a...
Abstract Assimiles or African patriots? The Emergence of Cultural Nationalisai in French-speaking Af...