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Cold War and Colonial Conflicts in British West African Adult Education, 1947–1953
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
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The British Government's once comfortable assumption that, whatever might happen in India, colonial administration would continue for an unlimited time in Africa, was undermined by a number of complex and interrelated factors after the Second World War. These included the emergence of the United States and Soviet Union as two superpowers both hostile to colonialism; the anti-colonial principles written into the United Nations Charter; the victory of the British Labor Party in the 1945 general election and the agitation of the African nationalist movements. Until 1948 these factors hastened the progress towards decolonization without causing undue friction. In 1947 the British Government took a giant step towards divesting itself of its empire by conceding independence to India, and a year later Arthur Creech-Jones, the Secretary of State for the Colonies, declared that British colonial policy was simply “to guide the colonial territories to responsible government within the Commonwealth in conditions that ensure to the people concerned both a fair standard of living and freedom from oppression from any quarter”. But in 1948 a number of events shattered this complacent air of dignified, peaceful and paternalistic progression towards eventual independence in British Africa. The communist coup d'état in Czechoslovakia followed by the Berlin blockade heralded the ending of peaceful coexistence and the beginnings of the cold war. It was not long before British imperial forces were locked in an anti-communist war in Malaya. Meanwhile in West Africa the Colonial Administration was stunned by the outbreak of violent nationalist agitation, demonstrations, strikes and rioting following Kwame Nkrumah's appointment as general secretary of the United Gold Coast Convention in January 1948 and the sporadic echoing of his ‘Positive Action’ campaign amongst the Zikist nationalists in Nigeria. Fear of cold war communist intervention in Africa and a determination to resist the ‘extremist’ nationalists created a very different atmosphere in the West African territories after 1948. During the next three years Nukrumah's militant Convention People's Party in the Gold Coast [Ghana] and the radical Zikists in Nigeria waged a violent revolutionary struggle for independence against a more sullenly antagonistic colonial power.
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References
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1. Young, C., ‘Decolonization in Africa’ in Colonialism in Africa 1870–1960 edited by Gann, L.H. & Duignan, P., vol. 2 (Cambridge, 1970), pp. 452–67; Aluko, O., “Politics of Decolonization in British West Africa 1945–1960” in History of West Africa edited by Ajayi, J.F.A. & Crowder, M., vol. 2 (London, 1974), pp. 622–40. This article, which was first presented as a research paper at a History of Education Conference in Birmingham and at a research seminar in the Adult Education Department at Leeds University in April 1982, forms a part of a more extensive investigation into political and ideological influences in adult education between c. 1924 and 1951 which has been made possible by the grant of a year's study leave by the University of Leeds and by the award of a research grant by the Leverhulme Trust, for both of which I am much indebted.Google Scholar
2. Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 5th ser., vol. 166 (1950), 607–661.Google Scholar
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20. Oxford Archives, Nigeria box: McLean's, , Coltham's and Nicholson's syllabuses and Report of Delegacy tutors taking Extramural Courses in Nigeria (1949); letter from McLean, J.A. to author (19 March 1982).Google Scholar
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27. Hodgkin became a renowned African scholar and much respected confidant of militants in the independence movements. In 1962 he became the first Director of the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ghana: Callaway, , ‘A Conversation’, p. 19 and see bibliography and biographical note in African Perspectives: Papers in the History, Politics and Economics of Africa Presented to Thomas Hodgkin , edited by Allen, C. and Johnson, R.W. (London, 1970).Google Scholar
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30. Oxford Archives, Nigeria box: Hodgkin's proposal for Extramural Courses in Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia; confidential note on Adult Education in the Colonies by Hodgkin, T.L. (n.d. ? November 1949); letters, Read, Margaret to Hodgkin, (21 November 1949) and Hodgkin, to Read, (6 December 1949); Creech-Jones papers, loc. cit., MSS. Brit. Emp. S.332, 34/3, ff. 34–6.Google Scholar
31. E.g. during 1954 F.J.E. Ogwuazor, an extramural tutor at the University College of Ibadan, visited Leeds University to study English adult education and this was followed by an invitation to Professor Raybould, Director of Extramural Studies at Leeds, to act for two terms as Visiting Director of Extramural Studies at Ibadan. Close relations between the two extramural departments were established. Shortly before Raybould's return, McGregor, J. was seconded to Ibadan for a year as Deputy Director of Extramural Studies and during 1955 Ayo Ogunsheye, Acting Director at Ibadan and four organisers from the same departments visited Leeds: 8th and 9th Annual Reports of University of Leeds Department of Adult Education and Extramural Studies (1953/4 and 1954/5). Boyden, H.J., Director of Extramural Studies at Durham University, developed similarly close links with Fourah Bay College, Sierra Leone, at this time and seconded staff there.Google Scholar
32. Interviews with Dees, Professor N. (January 1980) and Boyden, H.J. (April 1980) and correspondence with Wiseman, D. (April 1980).Google Scholar
33. Leeds University Extramural Department archives: Raybould papers on Academic Freedom, letter from Manchester Guardian , 2 June 1953; Manchester Guardian (16 June 1953); Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), vol. 516 (18 June 1953), 1195–6 and vol. 517 (15 July 1953), 2036–7; Information from Professor J. Rex. Raybould told Rex that in Nigeria there were objections raised to his application which “would have to be investigated” and that there was nothing that he personally or the university authorities could do about it. Rex was a frequent contributor to the correspondence columns of the Manchester Guardian and other newspapers on the Central African Federation issue at that time.Google Scholar
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