The Failure of Cotton Imperialism in Africa: Seasonal Constraints and Contrasting Outcomes in French West Africa and British Uganda
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Michiel de Haas, Wageningen University
Version: View help for Version V1
Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
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Replication Files.zip | application/zip | 248.6 MB | 09/06/2021 01:57:AM |
Project Citation:
de Haas, Michiel. The Failure of Cotton Imperialism in Africa: Seasonal Constraints and Contrasting Outcomes in French West Africa and British Uganda. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2021-09-06. https://doi.org/10.3886/E149401V1
Project Description
Summary:
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This is the replication package for the article "The Failure of Cotton Imperialism in Africa: Seasonal Constraints and Contrasting Outcomes in French West Africa and British Uganda."
Abstract: Cash-crop diffusion in colonial Africa was uneven and defied colonizers’ expectations and efforts, especially for cotton. This study investigates how agricultural seasonality affected African farmers’ cotton adoption, circa 1900–1960. A contrast between British Uganda and the interior of French West Africa demonstrates that a short rainy season and the resulting short farming cycles generated seasonal labor bottlenecks and food security concerns, limiting cotton output. Agricultural seasonality also shaped colonial coercion, investment, and African income-earning strategies. A labor productivity breakthrough in post-colonial Francophone West Africa mitigated the seasonality constraint, facilitating impressive cotton production post-1960.
Abstract: Cash-crop diffusion in colonial Africa was uneven and defied colonizers’ expectations and efforts, especially for cotton. This study investigates how agricultural seasonality affected African farmers’ cotton adoption, circa 1900–1960. A contrast between British Uganda and the interior of French West Africa demonstrates that a short rainy season and the resulting short farming cycles generated seasonal labor bottlenecks and food security concerns, limiting cotton output. Agricultural seasonality also shaped colonial coercion, investment, and African income-earning strategies. A labor productivity breakthrough in post-colonial Francophone West Africa mitigated the seasonality constraint, facilitating impressive cotton production post-1960.
Scope of Project
Geographic Coverage:
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Africa
Time Period(s):
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1/1/1900 – 12/31/1962
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