Research ArticleArticle
Hunting “Wrongdoers” and “Vagrants”
The Long-Term Perspective of Flight, Evasion, and Persecution in Colonial and Postcolonial Congo-Brazzaville, 1920–1980
ALEXANDER KEESE
African Economic History, November 2016, 44 (1) 152-180; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.44.1.152
ALEXANDER KEESE
Alexander Keese () is Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) Research Professor at the University of Geneva (Switzerland). He is the author of Living with Ambiguity: Integrating an African Elite in French and Portuguese Africa, 1930–61 (Stuttgart: Steiner, 2007) and (with Philip Havik and Maciel Santos) of Administration and Taxation in Former Portuguese Africa (1900–1945) (Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015). He is also the author of numerous articles on African colonial history. His most recent monograph is Ethnicity and the colonial state: finding & representing group identifications in coastal West African and global perspective (1850–1960) (Leiden: Brill, 2016).
In this issue
African Economic History
Vol. 44, Issue 1
16 Nov 2016
Hunting “Wrongdoers” and “Vagrants”
ALEXANDER KEESE
African Economic History Nov 2016, 44 (1) 152-180; DOI: 10.3368/aeh.44.1.152
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- Article
- Abstract
- Concessionary Rule and Its End: A Notable Change in Social Conditions?
- Overcharging the Congolese: The End of Concessionary Rule and the Continuity of Repressive Labor Conditions
- A Changing Context: Madingou and the Middle-Congo Between the End of the Railway Madness and the Abolition of Forced Labor, 1934–1946
- Compulsory Labor and Evasion Reinvented: From the Late Colonial State into the Military-Socialist Experiment
- Conclusion
- Footnotes
- Figures & Data
- Info & Metrics
- References
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