The reunification of the two Cameroons was the main issue that the nationalists debated in the British Southern Cameroons after the Second World War. This article attempts an analysis of the central role played in this debate by Dibongue, a “settler” who migrated from French administered Cameroon. Based on data from both primary and secondary sources, the study reveals that the immigrants from French Cameroon and Dibongue in particular, pioneered, dominated and sustained the Pan-Kamerun Movement before the indigenous elite took over the leadership of the movement in the late 1950s
There is a heated controversy among scholars and Anglophone activists today as to who an Anglophone ...
The historiography of the “Anglophone Problem” has drawn a lot of ink from Cameroonian historians, l...
According to Geoff Crowther, Cameroon is Africa's most socially artificial country. Although this de...
For fifteen years, from 1956 to 1971, Cameroon under French tutelage was the scene of a war of indep...
It is over fifty years since most countries in Africa became independent but the debate about the ro...
Expounding on the independence struggle in British Southern Cameroons between 1953-1961, this paper ...
This article focuses on the dynamics of internal migration taking the case of Bamenda Grassfielders’...
Based largely on archival sources, this paper discusses the involvement by the Union des Populations...
This study explores the predicament of Anglophone Cameroon - from the experiment in federation from ...
The immediate post-World War Two period was marked by the consensus across the major French politica...
Cameroon is usually misconceived of as a former French colony due to its geographical location which...
Political liberalization in Cameroon has been marked by the construction and mobilization of ethno...
The research problem is an analysis of the political evolution of Cameroon from a colony in 1884 to ...
This paper is aimed at proving that the Cameroonian Diaspora, otherwise referred to “Bush fallers or...
The 1961 UN-organised Plebiscite provoked serious ethnic tension, bitterness and calls from some qua...
There is a heated controversy among scholars and Anglophone activists today as to who an Anglophone ...
The historiography of the “Anglophone Problem” has drawn a lot of ink from Cameroonian historians, l...
According to Geoff Crowther, Cameroon is Africa's most socially artificial country. Although this de...
For fifteen years, from 1956 to 1971, Cameroon under French tutelage was the scene of a war of indep...
It is over fifty years since most countries in Africa became independent but the debate about the ro...
Expounding on the independence struggle in British Southern Cameroons between 1953-1961, this paper ...
This article focuses on the dynamics of internal migration taking the case of Bamenda Grassfielders’...
Based largely on archival sources, this paper discusses the involvement by the Union des Populations...
This study explores the predicament of Anglophone Cameroon - from the experiment in federation from ...
The immediate post-World War Two period was marked by the consensus across the major French politica...
Cameroon is usually misconceived of as a former French colony due to its geographical location which...
Political liberalization in Cameroon has been marked by the construction and mobilization of ethno...
The research problem is an analysis of the political evolution of Cameroon from a colony in 1884 to ...
This paper is aimed at proving that the Cameroonian Diaspora, otherwise referred to “Bush fallers or...
The 1961 UN-organised Plebiscite provoked serious ethnic tension, bitterness and calls from some qua...
There is a heated controversy among scholars and Anglophone activists today as to who an Anglophone ...
The historiography of the “Anglophone Problem” has drawn a lot of ink from Cameroonian historians, l...
According to Geoff Crowther, Cameroon is Africa's most socially artificial country. Although this de...