Chapter 2.British Business and Sudan During the Mahdiya
Chapter 3. The Beginnings of Imperial Development, 1899-1919
Part II Business and Imperialism in Sudan
Chapter 4. The Sudan Plantations Syndicate, 1904-1919
Chapter 5. The Sudan Plantations Syndicate, 1919-1939
Part III The Political-Economy of Imperialism in Sudan
Chapter 6. The Economy of Sudan, 1919-1939
Chapter 7. The Relationship Between Business and Government to 1945
Chapter 8. War, Decolonization, and After
Part IV – Conclusions
Chapter 9.Conclusion: Business, Imperialism and the Organization of Economic Development in Sudan
Simon Mollan is Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor in the Management School at the University of York (UK), where he was Head of the Head of the International Business, Strategy, and Management Group between 2012 and 2016. He is currently Director of the Sustainable Growth, Management, and Economic Productivity Pathway at the ESRC White Rose Doctoral Training Partnership, and previously held academic posts at York St John University, Durham University, and the University of Liverpool. He is Associate Editor of the journal Essays in Economic and Business History, and has published widely in the field of international economic history, financial history, and business history.
This book examines the economic and business history of Sudan, placing Sudan into the wider context of the impact of imperialism on economic development in sub-Saharan Africa. From the 1870s onwards British interest(s) in Sudan began to intensify, a consequence of the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 and the overseas expansion of British business activities associated with the Scramble for Africa and the renewal of imperial impulses in the second half of the nineteenth century. Mollan shows the gradual economic embrace of imperialism in the years before 1899; the impact of imperialism on the economic development of colonial Sudan to 1956; and then the post-colonial economic legacy of imperialism into the 1970s.
This text highlights how state-centred economic activity was developed in cooperation with British international business. Founded on an economic model that was debt-driven, capital intensive, and cash-crop oriented–the colonial economy of Sudan was centred on cotton growing. This model locked Sudan into a particular developmental path that, in turn, contributed to the nature and timing of decolonization, and the consequent structures of dependency in the post-colonial era.