2018
DOI: 10.1111/ehr.12618
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Gender, ethnicity, and unequal opportunity in colonial Uganda: European influences, African realities, and the pitfalls of parish register data

Abstract: The renaissance of African economic history in the past decade has opened up new research avenues for studying the long‐term social and economic development of Africa. A sensitive treatment of African realities in the evaluation of European colonial legacies and a critical stance towards the use of new sources and approaches is crucial. In this article, we engage with a recent article by Meier zu Selhausen and Weisdorf to show how selection biases in, and Eurocentric interpretations of, parish registers have p… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Inequality in the Global South, however, has a different and more continuous trajectory, with current manifestations of inequality rooted in pre-colonial and colonial political and economic systems. There is a large literature around the historical roots of current economic performance and inequality (for example, see Aboagye and Bolt 2018;Alfani and Tadei 2017;Alvaredo and Atkinson 2010;Banerjee and Iyer 2005;De Haas and Frankema 2016;Rehbein and Souza 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inequality in the Global South, however, has a different and more continuous trajectory, with current manifestations of inequality rooted in pre-colonial and colonial political and economic systems. There is a large literature around the historical roots of current economic performance and inequality (for example, see Aboagye and Bolt 2018;Alfani and Tadei 2017;Alvaredo and Atkinson 2010;Banerjee and Iyer 2005;De Haas and Frankema 2016;Rehbein and Souza 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research on the economic history of Africa has uncovered important links connecting colonialism and development (Frankema 2012; Jerven et al 2012; Cogneau and Moradi 2014; Cappelli and Baten 2016; Meier Zu Selhausen and Weisdorf 2016; Haas and Frankema 2016; Jedwab and Moradi 2016). Yet, the role played by African people and by local conditions as factors that interacted with colonialism and ultimately determined its outcome has been under-researched, failing to build narratives that include African agency as part of the history of the continent's development (Frankema, Green, and Hillbom 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ugandan women’s access to education during the colonial era was just as limited as it was elsewhere in Africa and the colonialists claims about the missionary’s role appear to have been exaggerated (De Haas, 2016). 19 In reality there were just a handful of elite missionary schools, and their approach was conservative.…”
Section: Uganda: the Perils Of Patronagementioning
confidence: 99%