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African Economic History

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Index by author

December 04, 2017; Volume 45,Issue 1
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  1. Da Silva, FILIPA RIBEIRO

    1. You have accessRestricted access
      Counting People and Homes in Urban Mozambique in the 1820sPopulation Structures and Household Size and Composition
      FILIPA RIBEIRO DA SILVA
      African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (1) 46-76; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.1.46
      FILIPA RIBEIRO DA SILVA
      Filipa Ribeiro da Silva is Senior Researcher at the International Institute of Social History of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Filipa obtained her PhD at Leiden University in 2009, after reading History and History of Portuguese Oceanic Expansion at the New University of Lisbon, where she received her BA (honors) and Master’s degree in 1996 and 2002. Her research interests include Economic and Social History, Maritime History and Labor History in sub-Saharan Africa. She has published on the Dutch and Portuguese in Western Africa and the Atlantic system, on labor migration to Atlantic Africa, and on historical demography and labor relations in Mozambique.
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  2. Maliehe, SEAN

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      The Rise and Fall of African Indigenous Entrepreneurs’ Economic Solidarity in Lesotho, 1966–1975
      SEAN MALIEHE
      African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (1) 110-137; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.1.110
      SEAN MALIEHE
      Sean Maliehe is a postdoctoral researcher in the Human Economy Programme (HE) at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. He holds a PhD in History (Economic History, with specialization in business and entrepreneurship). He works on Lesotho’s economic history, and, on money and mobile phones in South Africa and Lesotho. His recent publications include: “An Obscured Narrative in the Political Economy of Colonial Commerce in Lesotho, 1870–1966”, Historia 59, no. 2 (2014): 28–45; “Survival in post-mining communities in southern Africa: women and entrepreneurship in Lesotho”, in T. Salverda, A. Hollington, S. Klob, N. Scheinder and O. Tappe (eds), Hope for the Future: Efforts and ideas to improve the current economic predicament (2016), ; “Money and Markets for and against the People: The Rise and Fall of Basotho’s Economic Independence, 1830s–1930s,” in Keith Hart (ed.), Money in a Human Economy [Oxford: Berghanhn Human Economy Series, forthcoming (in press)].
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  3. Nyamunda, TINASHE

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      British Sterling Imperialism, Settler Colonialism and the Political Economy of Money and Finance in Southern Rhodesia, 1945 to 1962
      TINASHE NYAMUNDA
      African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (1) 77-109; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.1.77
      TINASHE NYAMUNDA
      Tinashe Nyamunda is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of the Free State, South Africa, where he recently attained his PhD. Before moving to South Africa, he worked at the Department of Economic History at the University of Zimbabwe from 2004–2012. He has published various articles in international journals and is co-editor with Richard Saunders of Facets of Power: Politics, Profits and People in the Making of Zimbabwe’s Blood Diamonds (Weaver Press and Wits University Press: Harare and Johannesburg, 2016).
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  4. Schwarz, SUZANNE

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      “A Just and Honourable Commerce”Abolitionist Experimentation in Sierra Leone in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries
      SUZANNE SCHWARZ
      African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (1) 1-45; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.1.1
      SUZANNE SCHWARZ
      Suzanne Schwarz is Professor of History at the University of Worcester, and an Honorary Research Fellow of the Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation at the University of Hull. She is Principal Investigator for a British Library Endangered Archives Project to preserve the rare and endangered archives in the Sierra Leone Public Archives. She is co-editor with Paul E. Lovejoy of Slavery, Abolition and the Transition to Colonialism in Sierra Leone (Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, 2015), and she has published articles in History in Africa (2012) and African Economic History (2010) focusing on the experiences of the first “recaptives” released by Royal Navy patrols at Sierra Leone.
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In this issue

African Economic History: 45 (1)
African Economic History
Vol. 45, Issue 1
4 Dec 2017
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Enslaving Commodities
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“We Must Adapt to Survive”
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