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African Economic History

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More articles from Articles

  • Open Access
    From Commodity to Colonial Currencies in West AfricaIntroduction
    Gareth Austin
    African Economic History, June 2025, 53 (1) 1-20; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.53.1.1
    Gareth Austin
    Gareth Austin , Emeritus Professor of Economic History, University of Cambridge.
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    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • Open Access
    The French Invasion of the Upper Senegal River and Payment Issues, 1880–1900Currency Transitions and the Role of the Treasury
    Toyomu Masaki
    African Economic History, June 2025, 53 (1) 60-88; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.53.1.60
    Toyomu Masaki
    Toyomu Masaki is a professor at the Faculty of Economics and Management, Kanazawa University in Japan. Her recent research interests include money and financial issues in French West Africa, considering colonial history.
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    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • Open Access
    Trade and Money in British West Africa, 1912–1970Evidence from Seasonal Cycles
    Leigh A. Gardner
    African Economic History, June 2025, 53 (1) 144-165; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.53.1.144
    Leigh A. Gardner
    Leigh A. Gardner is a Professor of Economic History at the London School of Economics and a Research Associate at Stellenbosch University. Her work focuses on Africa’s interactions with the global economy during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and the ways these have shaped state capacity and long-run development in the region.
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    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • Open Access
    The Colonial Currency TransitionA View from East Africa
    Karin Pallaver
    African Economic History, June 2025, 53 (1) 166-182; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.53.1.166
    Karin Pallaver
    Karin Pallaver is Associate Professor at the Department of History and Cultures, University of Bologna, where she teaches Modern African History and Indian Ocean History. She has recently edited the volume Monetary Transitions. Currencies, Colonialism and African Societies (Palgrave 2022).
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    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • Open Access
    Crises and AdaptationThe Colonial Currency System in Lagos and Its Hinterland, ca. 1900–1930
    Ayodeji Olukoju
    African Economic History, June 2025, 53 (1) 119-143; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.53.1.119
    Ayodeji Olukoju
    Ayodeji Olukoju is Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Lagos, Nigeria. He was DAAD Guest Professor at Bayreuth University (2022) and STIAS Fellow at Stellenbosch University (2024). A member of the advisory board of Journal of Global History, his recent publications include Politics, Economy and Society in Twentieth-Century Nigeria (London, 2023, co-edited with Tokunbo Ayoola), and articles in Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte (2024) and The International History Review (2025).
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    • For correspondence: [email protected]
  • Open Access
    War, Finance, and Monetary Reform in Ashanti, 1807–1935
    Kofi Adjepong-Boateng
    African Economic History, June 2025, 53 (1) 21-59; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.53.1.21
    Kofi Adjepong-Boateng
    Kofi Adjepong-Boateng is the Associate Director, Centre for Financial History, University of Cambridge. He is a Trustee of the United Kingdom’s Royal Economic Society and a past head of the Policy Committee, Centre for the Study of African Economies, University of Oxford. He holds a PhD in History from the University of Cambridge.
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  • Open Access
    Crossing Borders, Counting CoinsTaxation and Multiple Currencies at the Haute Volta/Gold Coast Border in the Early Twentieth Century
    Domenico Cristofaro and Seiji Nakao
    African Economic History, June 2025, 53 (1) 89-118; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.53.1.89
    Domenico Cristofaro
    Domenico Cristofaro is a research fellow and adjunct lecturer at the University of Bologna. He is a historian of Africa with an anthropological background. His interests encompass urban history, economic history, and the relationship between African planning, political changes, currencies, and commercial and infrastructural transitions. He has published with international publishers and journals such as the International Journal of African Historical Studies and The Journal of African History.
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    Seiji Nakao
    Seiji Nakao is an Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto University. He has conducted his research in Burkina Faso, Mali, Côte d’Ivoire, and France and received his PhD (Anthropology) from Nanzan University in 2017. He won the 33rd Japan Association for African Studies Research Award for his book, Modernities of the Interior West Africa: Historical Anthropology of State and Stateless Societies (2020, Fukyosha, in Japanese) in 2021.
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  • You have accessRestricted access
    Uncovering the “Quality of Indigence”Health and Poverty under Police Scrutiny in 1950s Upper-Volta
    Thomas Zuber
    African Economic History, November 2024, 52 (2) 99-131; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.52.2.99
    Thomas Zuber
    Columbia University
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  • You have accessRestricted access
    Sylvanus Olympio, the Franc CFA, and His Quest for Monetary Sovereignty (1958–1963)
    Robin Frisch
    African Economic History, November 2024, 52 (2) 80-98; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.52.2.80
    Robin Frisch
    University of Bayreuth
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  • You have accessRestricted access
    Famine, Labor, and Power in Colonial Rwanda, 1916–1944
    Georgia Brunner
    African Economic History, November 2024, 52 (2) 26-45; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/aeh.52.2.26
    Georgia Brunner
    Georgia Institute of Technology
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    • For correspondence: [email protected]

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