1. Introduction: New directions in the history of business and development in post-colonial Africa
Véronique Dimier and Sarah Stockwell
2. Business, the Commonwealth, and the rethoric of development: the Federation of Commonweath Chambers of Commerce and Africa, 1945-1974.
Andrew Dilley
3. Adapting to independence: the East African Association, post-colonial business networks and economic development.
Poppy Cullen
4. Belgian firms, development plans and the independence of the Belgian Congo.
Charlotte Strick
5. Oil companies as agents of post-colonial relations: France, Algeria, and Italy in the Sahara
Marta Musso
6. A partner in progress? Shell-BP’s development role in Nigeria duing the transition to independence.
Christopher Minton
7. The ‘know-how of the world is mainly with private companies’: the Commonwealth Development Corporation and British business in postcolonial Africa
Sarah Stockwell
8. Decolonizing finance, Africanizing banking
François Pacquement
9. The European Development Fund, a dowry for French companies?
Véronique Dimier
10. Displacing the French? Ivorian development and the question of economic decolonization, 1946-1975.
Abou Bamba
11. European development cooperation and the private sector, from the 1970 to 2000.
Olivier Van den Bossche
12. Afterword- Véronique Dimier and Sarah Stockwell
Véronique Dimier is Professor at the Free University of Brussels, Belgium. She held the Chaire Gutenberg in 2015 at SAGE, the Research Centre on Society, Stakeholders and Government in Europe, at the University of Strasbourg. She has worked extensively on French and British colonial administrations and on the second career of French colonial officials, most notably in the development field. She is the author of Le Gouvernement des Colonies, Regards Croisés Franco-Britanniques (2004), and The Invention of a European Development Bureaucracy: Recycling Empire (2014).
Sarah Stockwell is Professor of Imperial and Commonwealth History at King’s College London, UK. Her research focuses on the history of British decolonisation, especially in Africa. Her publications include The Business of Decolonization. British Business Strategies in the Gold Coast (2000), The British End of the British Empire (2018), and, as editor, The British Empire. Themes and Perspectives (2007) and, with L.J. Butler, The Wind of Change: Harold Macmillan and British Decolonization (2013).
This collection brings together a range of case studies of European companies (most notably those of former colonial powers) and considers their involvement in development after European decolonisation. In this way, the book makes an original contribution to post-colonial studies. Individual chapters by both established and early career scholars examine the activities of foreign enterprise in various African states and the companies’ strategies to stay in Africa. They explore how businesses were not just challenged by the new international landscape but benefited from the opportunities it offered, particularly those provided by development aid. Together they constitute an important contribution to our understanding of both business and development in post-colonial Africa, redressing an imbalance in existing histories of both business and development which focus predominantly on the colonial period. This volume breaks new ground as one of the very first to bring the study of foreign companies and development aid into the same frame of analysis.