Violence and colonial order : police, workers and protest in the European colonial empires, 1918-1940
Enregistré dans:
Auteur principal : | |
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Format : | Livre |
Langue : | anglais |
Titre complet : | Violence and colonial order : police, workers and protest in the European colonial empires, 1918-1940 / Martin Thomas |
Publié : |
Cambridge (GB), New York, Melbourne [etc.] :
Cambridge University Press
, 2012 |
Description matérielle : | 1 vol. (XII-527 p.) |
Collection : | Critical perspectives on empire |
Sujets : |
- Introduction : Police, labour and colonial violence
- Part I. Ideas and Practices
- 1. Colonial policing : a discursive framework
- 2. 'What did you do in the colonial police force, daddy ?'
- 3. 'Paying the butcher's bill' : policing British colonial protest after 1918
- Part II. Colonial Case Studies : British, French and Belgian
- 4. Communal policing, policing work, or intelligence gathering ? Gendarmes at work in Morocco and Algeria after 1918
- 5. Policing Tunisia : mineworkers, fellahs and nationalist protest
- 6. Rubber, coolies and communists : policing disorder in French Vietnam
- 7. Stuck together ? Rubber production, labour regulation and policing in British Malaya
- 8. Caning the workers ? Policing and violence in Jamaica's sugar industry
- 9. Oil and order : repressive violence in Trinidad's oilfields
- 10. Profits, privatization and police : the birth of Sierra Leone's diamond industry
- 11. Policing and politics in Nigeria : the political economy of indirect rule, 1929-39
- 12. Depression and revolt : policing the Belgian Congo
- Conclusion