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7 - Administrative Experimentation, Boundary Formation, and Colonial Consolidation, 1900–1914

from Part II - Conquest and Colonization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2024

Toyin Falola
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Austin
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Summary

This chapter explores the methodology behind the attempts of Nigeria’s colonial administration to consolidate the complex patchwork of peoples, cultures, polities, and interests acquired throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. As with their conquests and acquisitions of Nigerian polities, the strategies used by colonial officials differed from region to region due to the differing conditions and extreme diversity of Nigeria. The chapter will detail these different strategies and why they were assigned to the regions in question. However, despite the great diversity in administrative techniques, the chapter seeks to contextualize the overarching strategies and policies implemented by colonial officials who wished to maximize control while minimizing costs. To this end, the British colonial government sought to promote local authorities who would bear the brunt of “less important” administrative responsibilities. This marked a shift from previous colonial policies, which sought to destabilize native power structures to make their acquisition easier. The process of administrative consolidation was far from a one-sided affair. The chapter details how native authorities, cultures, and people reacted to and influenced the activities mentioned earlier.

Type
Chapter
Information
Understanding Colonial Nigeria
British Rule and Its Impact
, pp. 142 - 170
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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