TY - BOOK ID - 9323658 TI - Darfur. Colonial violence, Sultanic legacies and local politics, 1916-1956. PY - 2015 SN - 9781847011114 184701111X 9781782046349 1782046348 PB - Woodbridge, Suffolk : James Currey Publishers DB - UniCat KW - Colonies KW - History. KW - 1899 - 1956 KW - Sudan KW - Darfur (Sudan) KW - History KW - Anti-colonialism KW - Colonial affairs KW - Colonialism KW - Neocolonialism KW - Imperialism KW - Non-self-governing territories KW - Colonization KW - Dār Fūr (Sudan) KW - دارفور KW - دارفور (السودان) KW - Darfour (Sudan) KW - 1916-1956. KW - African Politics. KW - Colonial History. KW - Colonial Violence. KW - Darfur. KW - Local Politics. KW - Sultanic Legacies. UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:9323658 AB - This work engages with a fundamental question in the study of African history and politics: to what extent did the colonial state re-define the character of local politics in the societies it governed? Existing scholarship on Darfur under the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium (1916-1956) has suggested that colonial governance here represented either straightforward continuity or utterly transformative change from the region's deep history of independent statehood under the Darfur Sultanate. This book argues that neither view is adequate: it shows that British rule bequeathed a culture of governance to Darfur which often rested on state coercion and violence, but which was also influenced by enduring local conceptions of the relationship between ruler and ruled, and the agendas of local actors. The state was perceived as a resource as well as a threat by local peoples. Although the British did introduce significant changes to the character of governance in Darfur, local populations negotiated the significance of these innovations, challenging the authority of state-appointed chiefs, defying official attempts to police the boundaries of ethnic territories, and competing for the resources of political support and development that the state represented. Even the violence of the state was shaped and channelled by the initiative of local elites. Finally, the author suggests that contemporary conflict and politics in the region must be understood in the context of this deeper history of interaction between state and local agendas in shaping everyday realities of power and governance. Chris Vaughan is Lecturer in African History at Liverpool John Moores University. Previously, he taught at the Universities of Durham, Leeds, Liverpool and Edinburgh. His articles have appeared in the Journal of African History and the Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. He is co-editor (with Lotje De Vries and Mareike Schomerus) of The Borderlands of South Sudan. ER -