Research ArticleArticle
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).
In this issue
African Economic History
Vol. 45, Issue 1
4 Dec 2017
British Sterling Imperialism, Settler Colonialism and the Political Economy of Money and Finance in Southern Rhodesia, 1945 to 1962
TINASHE NYAMUNDA
African Economic History Dec 2017, 45 (1) 77-109; DOI: 10.3368/aeh.45.1.77
Jump to section
- Article
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Colonial Monetary Integration and its Legacies in Africa
- Attempts at Sterling Recovery: The British Discriminatory Sterling Network and the Politics of Southern Rhodesia’s Monetary Economy, 1947–1952
- Money Politics, Southern Rhodesia and the Federation
- Monetary Politics and the Establishment of the Reserve Bank of Rhodesia and Nyasaland
- Money and the Shift to Right Wing Politics, 1958–1962
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgment
- Footnotes
- Info & Metrics
- References
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