JCH 2017 Volume 42 Issue 1
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Browsing JCH 2017 Volume 42 Issue 1 by Subject "Colonialism"
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Item Open Access Decolonization in southern Africa: reflections on the Namibian and South African cases(Faculty of Humanities, University of the Free State, 2017) Saunders, ChrisWhile the term “decolonization” is now applied in many different situations, with different meanings, its original and prime usage relates to the process leading to the ending of colonial rule. Though there is a large literature on that process, we lack a detailed overview of the way it unfolded in Southern Africa. This article focuses on two countries in that region, Namibia and South Africa, and raises some of the questions that need to be addressed in relation to their “decolonization”. It also seeks to show how complex “decolonization” was in these two instances, and the importance of seeing individual cases in a regional and comparative perspective.Item Open Access One country, three colonial legacies: the politics of colonialism, capitalism and development in the pre- and post-colonial Cameroon(Faculty of Humanities, University of the Free State, 2017) Lekane, Gillo Momo; Asuelime, LuckyCameroon is usually misconceived of as a former French colony due to its geographical location which is at the intersection of what used to be called French West Africa and French Equatorial Africa. This misconception clouds the country’s triple colonial heritage that has shaped and continues to shape Cameroon’s historical path and its agro-political landscape. The colonial heritage of Cameroon contributes to an understanding of key socio-economic, political and developmental challenges the country has been facing and continues to face. This article discusses the history of Cameroon’s early contacts with Europeans (Germans, French and British in particular) and how these encounters influenced and shaped the country’s economic history. It highlights how colonialism was a vehicle used to incept capitalism in the country with an emphasis on cash crop farming. The article also discusses the legacy of these heritages and the strategies that were successively adopted to address economic development challenges.