Published August 4, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Reading Rostow in a Rhodesian Prison: Anticolonialism and the Reinvention of Modernization in British Central Africa

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

This article examines how and why anti-colonial activists in Nyasaland, now Malawi, seized on modernization theory to make their case for national independence in the early 1960s. As far as British officials were concerned, Nyasaland's small size, large population, and agrarian character meant that it stood little chance of joining the modern, industrialized world. The Malawi Congress Party, however, saw their country differently, as a future "Central African Denmark." This article argues that Congress's Danish vision was part of an anti-colonial challenge to the industry-first development strategies that dominated early international development thinking. Congress thinkers, far from rejecting the modernization idea, flipped the framework from industry to agriculture, helping to open new possibilities for small, agrarian territories on the empire's margins. The article concludes by showing how this agrarian counter-current in development thinking subsequently shaped the international community's turn to market-friendly, agriculture-centered policies in the 1970s, though in ways that eclipsed the original anti-colonial vision.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1017/S0010417522000287
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5012

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Social Sciences Division
Department(s)
History