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Study of rural development in Zambia during the period from 1890 to 1964 - covers historical aspects, trends, geographical aspects, cultural factors, demographic aspects, tribal peoples, the distribution of White Africans, agricultural production, systems of agriculture, migrant workers, land tenure, the infrastructure, health, natural resources, economic planning, etc. Bibliography pp. 275 to 297, maps and statistical tables.
This collection of essays, a people's history, is a depiction of Zambia under colonial rule. The essays, written by former colleagues of Samuel Chipunga, evoke the period of British rule. Although the experience of colonialism was shared by other African countries, Zambia was in many ways unique.
Study of rural development in Zambia during the period from 1890 to 1964 - covers historical aspects, trends, geographical aspects, cultural factors, demographic aspects, tribal peoples, the distribution of White Africans, agricultural production, systems of agriculture, migrant workers, land tenure, the infrastructure, health, natural resources, economic planning, etc. Bibliography pp. 275 to 297, maps and statistical tables.
A definitive history of Zambian social and economic development begins in the Stone Age and extends through the first ten years of independence
While Northern Rhodesia was preparing for independence as the Republic of Zambia in 1964, impoverished villages in the remote north east of the country were divided by a bitter conflict fuelled by apparently irreconcilable political and religious convictions. This book describes the origin of the dispute and how it led to skirmishes, defiance of authority, massacre, torture and displacement: a previously unreported mutiny. It is as such an important contribution to Zambian history, with a significant proportion of the material being published for the first time. The author was a district commissioner at Isoka during the time of the massacre and was personally involved in the peace settlement. He argues that the situation need not have escalated had the authorities acted to prevent it; and that for different reasons, both the colonial government and its independent successor tried to distort the gravity of what occurred.