Routledge Handbook of the Economic History of Colonialism
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Product details
- ISBN 9781032502151
- Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
- Publication Date: 20 Aug 2026
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
European colonial rule in Asia, Africa, and the Americas was a world-changing force and left a variety of legacies, demographic, economic, environmental, technological and cultural. The economic history of colonialism has seen an outburst of research in the last twenty-odd years; but, with many significant new works appearing in specialist journals, students and teachers of the field may still find it challenging to explain what this scholarship adds up to, its most significant claims and breakthroughs, and how it relates to older versions of the economic history of colonialism.
This handbook gathers a set of specially-commissioned essays written by leading contributors to the field which focus on the two principal waves of European colonialism since the 15th century: the first in which Europeans converged mainly on the Americas (c. 1490s-1820s) and the second in which attention was focused on acquiring control over large swaths of Asia and Africa (c. 1850s-1970s). It shows students of economic history the key facts that need to be explained about the imperial powers, the colonial experience, and why the European empires outside Europe are significant for the economic history of the world. The handbook also includes studies of the Japanese and American empires in Asia, as these were provoked by and in nature quite comparable to the formation of European empires thus providing worthwhile and meaningful comparisons.
This handbook will serve as a vital resource for research, teaching, and reference, offering readers insights into economic history, colonialism, globalization, and the forces that have shaped the modern world economy.
Ewout Frankema is Professor of Economic and Environmental History at Wageningen University and research fellow of the UK Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). His research focuses on a deeper understanding of the long-term comparative economic development of developing regions (Africa, Latin America, Asia) and the historical origins and nature of present-day global inequality. Frankema currently works on the project South-South Divergence: Comparative Histories of Regional Integration in Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa since 1850 funded by the Dutch Science Foundation.
Tirthankar Roy is Professor of Economic History, London School of Economics. Published extensively on South Asian history and comparative development and taught courses on South Asia and Global History. One of the editors of the Cambridge Economic History of Modern South Asia. Recent books include Monsoon Economies (2022) and Law and the Economy in a Young Democracy: India since 1947 (with Anand Swamy, 2021).
