Empire on the Cheap

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A01=Denis Cogneau
Author_Denis Cogneau
Category=KCP
Category=NH
Category=NHD
Cogneau
colonial history
Denis Cogneau
economic history
empire on the cheap
empire on the cheap The Political Economy of French Colonialism Since 1800
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European history
France and colonialism
Francophone history
French colonial history
French colonialism
French colonisation
French colonization
French economic history
French empire
French history
French political economy
French political history
French politics
history of colonialism
history of empire
history of Europe
modern European history
modern French history
modern history
political economics
political economy
political history
politics in France
The Political Economy of French Colonialism Since 1800
Un empire bon marche

Product details

  • ISBN 9781509563333
  • Weight: 879g
  • Dimensions: 163 x 238mm
  • Publication Date: 22 May 2026
  • Publisher: Polity Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the nineteenth century, France embarked on the colonization of whole swathes of Africa and Asia. What drove this policy, and what methods did it use to establish and enforce French domination? What disruptive effects did this have on the colonized societies, and what did it mean for their economic and social development? Today, can we say they have been completely decolonized? Empire on the Cheap offers new answers to these ever-controversial questions.

Drawing on extensive archival work and statistical analysis, Denis Cogneau offers a richly detailed description of the colonial states and how they functioned, with a particular focus on issues of taxation, military recruitment, capital flows and inequalities. He shows that the Empire cost France little until the wars of independence following World War II, and that capital from France did not trickle down to the colonies. The French Republic proclaimed its 'civilizing mission', but its rule did not lead to the development of the occupied countries, and instead established violent colonial regimes with ambiguous and sometimes conflicting goals. Such regimes mainly benefited a small minority of French colonists and capitalists. Yet, even after winning independence, nationalist elites in the former colonies most often maintained an authoritarian and deeply unequal state order.

Examining both the evolution of the colonized societies and what has become of them after independence, Cogneau makes a major contribution to our understanding of imperialism, past and present.

Denis Cogneau is Professor at the Paris School of Economics (PSE) and School for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences (EHESS), and Senior Research Fellow at the French Institute for Development (IRD).

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