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From Strangers to Minorities in West Africa*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

I am somewhat daunted by the honour of opening this conference; for what I have to offer is not the product of intensive scholarship but a broad and possibly contentious argument about the whole sub-continent of West Africa (roughly bounded by the Senegal river, Lake Chad and Mount Cameroon). My underlying hypotheses will be that many so-called minority problems in contemporary Africa derive from changes introduced by the creation of colonial states, rather than from some exotic African malady called ‘tribalism’ and that African experience over the last millennium may sometimes be more relevant to contemporary problems than the received wisdom of western political science. I have some fear that, to adapt a phrase of Sir Keith Hancock, these may prove no themes for scholars.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1981

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References

1 Parliamentary Papers, 1957–8, Cmnd. 505. Nigeria: Report of the Commission appointed to enquire into the fears of Minorities and the means of allaying them, p. iii.

2 Ibid., p. 88.

3 E.g. ‘… guarantees… for… the fair treatment of the minority by the majority’ (Mrs. K. O'Shea to W. E. Gladstone, 5 Aug. 1886: Lyons, F. S. L., Charles Stewart Parnell (London, 1977), p. 292)Google ScholarPubMed.

4 For a general view of pre-colonial international relations, see Smith, R. S., Warfare and Diplomacy in Pre-Colonial West Africa (London, 1976)Google Scholar, chs. 1 and 2.

5 Wilks, I., Asante in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge, 1975), pp. 267–9Google Scholar.

6 For other examples, see Peil, M., ‘The Expulsion of West African Aliens’, Journal of Modern African Studies, ix (1971), 205–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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15 Ibid., pp. 299, 301, 311 (Ibn Battuta).

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27 Hargreaves, J. D., ‘The Evolution of the Native Affairs Department’, Sierra Leone Studies, n.s. 3 (1954), 168–84Google Scholar. These records have been well utilized in Harrell-Bond et al, Community Leadership, which forms the principal source for this paragraph.

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36 Cohen, A., Custom and Politics in Urban Africa: A Study of Hausa Migrants in Yoruba Towns (London, 1969), pp. 103–19Google Scholar. In Ibadan the term ‘Zongo’ is kept for the cattle-market itself.

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41 Short, , ‘Continuity and Change’, p. 336 and ch. 5Google Scholar, passim, for the basis of this paragraph. There is a somewhat different interpretation in Schildkrout, , People of the Zongo, pp. 194206Google Scholar.

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43 Harrell-Bond et al, Community Leadership, App. C and passim. 44C.O. 267/688/32348, Part 1. Sessional Paper No. 4 of 1944, Reconstitution of the Freetown City Council.

45 Banton, M. P., West African City: A Study of Tribal Life in Freetown (London, 1957)Google Scholar.

46 Cohen, Custom and Politics, esp. ch. 5.

47 Report of the Committee appointed to examine the working of the Tribal Administration (Colony) Ordinance, 1952. Copy in writer's possession.

48 These two paragraphs are based on Harrell-Bond et al, Community Leadership, which quotes from unpublished documents as well as personal observations.

49 Harrell-Bond, , Community Leadership, pp. 267–79Google Scholar.

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51 Short, , ‘Continuity and Change’, p. 469Google Scholar; see also ch. 6 and app. 2, passim, for the argument of these paragraphs. See also Adomako-Sarfoh, J., ‘The Effects of the Expulsion of Migrant Workers on Ghana's Economy, with Particular Reference to the Cocoa Industry’, Modern Migrations in Western Africa, ed. Amin, S. (London, 1974), pp. 138–55Google Scholar.