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Table of Contents

December 04, 2017; Volume 45,Issue 2

Front Matter

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    Front Matter
    African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (2) 0450001_1;

Articles

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    Gender, Spirituality, and Economic Change in Rural GambiaAgricultural Production in the Lower Gambia Region, c. 1830s–1940s
    ASSAN SARR
    African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (2) 1-26; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.2.1
    ASSAN SARR
    Assan Sarr () is an assistant professor of History at Ohio University. He is the author of Islam, Power, and Dependency in the Gambia River Basin: The Politics of Land Control, 1790–1940, with the University of Rochester Press. Sarr has also published articles with the Mande Studies and African Studies Review as well as book reviews.
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    Indian Textiles and Gum Arabic in the Lower Senegal RiverGlobal Significance of Local Trade and Consumers in the Early Nineteenth Century
    KAZUO KOBAYASHI
    African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (2) 27-53; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.2.27
    KAZUO KOBAYASHI
    Kazuo Kobayashi is a postdoctoral fellow of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and a visiting scholar at the University of Tokyo. He received his PhD degree in Economic History from the London School of Economics and Political Science in 2016. He is studying Indian cotton textiles in precolonial West Africa and his particular areas of interest are the history of early modern globalization, West African economic history and the history of Indian cotton textiles.
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    Virtual AbolitionThe Economic Lattice of Luwalo Forced Labor in the Uganda Protectorate
    OPOLOT OKIA
    African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (2) 54-84; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.2.54
    OPOLOT OKIA
    Opolot Okia is an Associate Professor of African History at Wright State University and was a Fulbright Scholar at Makerere University in Uganda for the 2016–17 academic year. His research covers forced labor in British East Africa. He has published several articles and a book, Communal Labor in Colonial Kenya: The Legitimization of Coercion, 1912–1930 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
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    Secondary Industry and Settler ColonialismSouthern Rhodesia before and after the Unilateral Declaration of Independence
    IAN PHIMISTER and VICTOR GWANDE
    African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (2) 85-112; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.2.85
    IAN PHIMISTER
    Ian Phimister is Senior University Research Professor and Head of the International Studies Group at the University of the Free State in South Africa. An economic historian who has written extensively on Central and Southern African topics, as well as on patterns of British overseas investment, he has held positions at the Universities of Zambia, Cape Town, Oxford, and Sheffield.
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    VICTOR GWANDE
    Victor Gwande is currently a PhD Candidate in Africa Studies at the International Studies Group, Center for Africa Studies, University of the Free State, South Africa. He also holds a BA Honours in Economic History from the University of Zimbabwe and an MA in Africa Studies from the University of the Free State. He has research interests in economic and business history, youth, democracy and governance. He has also published in regional journals.
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    Electricity Access Inequality in Sub-Saharan Africa, 1950–2000
    HANAAN MARWAH
    African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (2) 113-144; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.45.2.113
    HANAAN MARWAH
    Hanaan Marwah is a visiting research fellow at the London School of Economics and has worked in the African electricity sector for both public and private sector institutions. Her work appears in publications including the Economic History Review (2014) and Marc Badia-Miró, Vincente Pinilla, and Henry Willebald (eds.), Natural Resources and Economic Growth: Learning from History (2015). She holds a D.Phil. from the University of Oxford.
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Back Matter

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    Back Matter
    African Economic History, December 2017, 45 (2) 0450001_2;
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African Economic History: 45 (2)
African Economic History
Vol. 45, Issue 2
4 Dec 2017
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