Private Colonialism in Africa
Private Colonialism in Africa (with Giorgio Chiovelli, Etienne Le Rossignol, and Stelios Michalopoulos)
Seminario enmarcado en el Reto ICS 24-25 ‘Orientalismo y occidentalismo: miradas cruzadas’, titulado "Private Colonialism in Africa (with Giorgio Chiovelli, Etienne Le Rossignol, and Stelios Michalopoulos)".
Colonization in most parts of Africa was a private enterprise. To minimize the burden on the metropole, imperial powers exploited the continent’s riches by carving large swathes of land and assigning them to concessionary companies, which ruled the interior often ruthlessly—concessions regarded large plantations, mining, forestry, and monopsony-monopoly rights. Sometimes, concessionary companies had state functions, providing security, building schools, patrolling borders, and more. We take a holistic approach that examines the short-, medium-, and long-run effects of private colonization in Sub-Saharan Africa.
An integral part of our research is the compilation of a new comprehensive geospatial dataset that maps all types of concessionary firms, providing codified information on their operations (e.g., cotton, palm oil, diamond, gold, rubber, monopsony), primary practices (e.g., forced labor, coercion, cooperation with local chiefs), and investments (e.g., transportation infrastructure, public goods). We also compile high spatial resolution data recording numerous aspects of colonization: military posts, schools, clinics, missions, administrative boundaries, prisons, and violence, among others.
First, we compare education, living conditions, urbanization, and structural transformation inside and outside historical concessionary boundaries to quantify the local effects of concessions. Second, we explore heterogeneity, a priori likely, as there was a wide variation in the practices and operations of companies and the administration across colonies, periods, and even regions in a given colony. Third, based on the newly compiled data, we compile proxies of all core aspects of colonization across small administrative units and pixels and explore their origins and implications.
Ponente: Elias Papaioannu (London Business School, Reino Unido).
Elias Papaioannu is a Professor of Economics at the London Business School, where he co-directs the Wheeler Institute for Business and Development. Elias, a CEPR Research Fellow, serves as a Managing Co-Editor of the Review of Economic Studies. He holds an LL.B. from the law school of the National Kapodistrian University of Athens, a Master's in Public Administration (MPA) from Columbia University, and a Ph.D. in economics from the London Business School. His research covers international finance, political economy, economic history, growth, and development. He has published in leading peer-reviewed journals, including Nature, Econometrica, the Review of Economic Studies, the Quarterly Journal of Economics, the Journal of Political Economy, the American Economic Review, and the Journal of Finance. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 2024. His research has been recognized with the 2013 European Investment Bank Young Economist award. In 2018, Papaioannu received a European Research Council (ERC) consolidator grant for research on African economic history.
Seminario presencial
Date
02 October 2024
Hour
12:00
Place
Edificio Amigos. Aula M3