The renaissance in understanding africa’s economic past
The renaissance in understanding africa’s economic past"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
For too long, Henry Morton Stanley’s reference to Africa as the Dark Continent held sway. Not only was the African interior terra incognito, but so too was its past. The apparent dearth of
written historical records, owing to the slow adoption of writing technology and the humid environment that makes preservation difficult, meant that historians of Africa had to find
alternative ways to unravel the continent’s past. But since at least the 1960s, archaeology, linguistics, and oral histories all contributed to establish African history as one of the
leading intellectual pursuits. African economic history in particular thrived on the optimism of post-independence Africa. The rapid economic transformations of the late colonial and early
post-colonial period led to an intellectual curiosity into the colonial and pre-colonial economic trajectories of indigenous societies. In 1960, for example, the World Bank claimed that “the
future for Africa is bright”. Ideological battles between Marxists and liberals fuelled the debates. But by the 1980s economic history took a back seat. This was at the same as African
economies slowly ground to a halt. Also, intellectual movements in economics diverged towards more mathematical modelling, and in history towards cultural and social explanations. THE
SLUMBER ENDS The slumber remained until the early 2000s. Several prominent economists, now equipped with the tools of econometrics, revisited old ideas about the impact of slavery and
colonialism. They explained how settler mortality rates influenced the institutional framework adopted in colonial societies. These institutions and their consequences for economic
development persist to this day. Using a large data set of slaves shipped to the Americas, another economist showed that regions that suffered most from the slave trade still have lower
levels of development today. Most recently, studies showed how the TseTse fly harmed the development of intensive farming in Africa, surplus production and trade. All three of these
methodologically ground-breaking papers were published in economics journals. ECONOMIC HISTORIANS TAKE UP THE CHALLENGE Historians were slow to respond to these new developments. Their main
critique was that economists “compressed history”, linking events several centuries ago with outcomes today. But the feathers were ruffled enough that a new generation of economic historians
could take up the call and challenge the hypotheses of yesteryear. These economic historians were trained in the arts of statistics and archival sources. And so came the renaissance of
African economic history. In 2011, scholars mostly based in Sweden, England and the Netherlands created a new African Economic History Network. In 2012, South Africa’s Stellenbosch
University hosted the World Economic History Congress, the first time it had been hosted on African soil. In 2014, the Economic History Review, one of the leading Economic History journals,
published a special edition on African economic history. And last week, the Laboratory for the Economics of Africa’s Past was launched. The aim is to bring together scholars and students
interested in understanding and explaining the long-term economic development of Africa’s diverse societies. NEW INSIGHTS INTO PRE-COLONIAL AFRICA The new African economic history is already
challenging earlier wisdom. This includes precolonial and colonial Africa being more prosperous than previously thought. There is also the knowledge that railways had profound effects, both
positive and negative, on African societies. Also, settler farmers at the Cape of Good Hope attained standards of living as high as some of the wealthiest 18th-century societies. And more
research is on the way. The 2014 African Economic History meeting in London attracted more than 40 presenters in comparison to a dozen or so only three years ago. This year the event, to be
held in Wageningen, the Netherlands, will have more than 60 presentations. Unfortunately, few African universities are taking part in this revival. Of the 40 presenters in London last year,
less than a handful were African. This is partly due to a lack of funding, not only to travel but to afford the painstaking digitisation and transcription of archival sources. It is also
partly a methodological divide that meant African universities are more closely aligned to history than to the methods and techniques of economics. Change will be slow, but the signs are
positive. The 2015 African Economic History meetings in the Netherlands will have three times the number of African participants as the London meeting. Poet Maya Angelou once said that: >
No man can know where he is going unless he knows exactly where he > has been and exactly how he arrived at his present place. The most valuable contribution of the new African economic
history so far has been to show that Africans have not always been poor, nor are current poverty levels an inevitable destiny. As Africa’s economies are rising, so too is our understanding
of its economic past. The Dark Continent is becoming a lighter shade of grey.
Trending News
Pop-up demonstration streetscape, broad street, memphis, tennesseeLivable Memphis, a nonprofit organization, teamed-up with the Broad Avenue Arts District. Using a borrowed and adapted c...
Keep your flower garden blooming all season longSEASONAL BOUQUET FAVORITES As you plan your garden and plant the flowers, think about what might be in bloom during...
Ben affleck announces he was in rehabIn a short post on Facebook, Ben Affleck announced Tuesday that he has "completed treatment for alcohol addiction; ...
Attention Required! | CloudflareVistorias FISCALIZAÇÃO DA PREFEITURA NO CARNAVAL DE BH REGISTRA NÃO USO DE MÁSCARAS COMO A MAIOR IRREGULARIDADE 3/03/22 ...
The receptor s1p1 overrides regulatory t cell–mediated immune suppression through akt-mtorABSTRACT Regulatory T cells (Treg cells) are critically involved in maintaining immunological tolerance, but this potent...
Latests News
The renaissance in understanding africa’s economic pastFor too long, Henry Morton Stanley’s reference to Africa as the Dark Continent held sway. Not only was the African inter...
For the gluten-free, a good dinner of pasta and breadPasta and bread – not really the first dinner menu that comes to mind for people who don’t eat gluten. But it was the hu...
Quality of couple relationship and associated factors in parents of nicu-cared infants during the first year after birthABSTRACT OBJECTIVE To describe factors associated with quality of couple relationships among parents of infants cared fo...
Us says iran ‘deeply involved’ in red sea attacks on commercial vesselsUS says Iran ‘deeply involved’ in Red Sea attacks on commercial vessels | WTVB | 1590 AM · 95.5 FM | The Voice of Branch...
Sleep as a random walk: a super-statistical analysis of eeg data across sleep stagesABSTRACT In clinical practice, human sleep is classified into stages, each associated with different levels of muscular ...