ABSTRACT

British Somaliland provides a history of the administration of the British Somaliland Protectorate from the time when Somaliland first became governable, following the defeat of Abdullah Hassan, to independence.

Describing the interplay between general imperial policies, and greater realities and developments in Somaliland, the focus of the book remains on the mechanism by which the Protectorate was operated. The regime that developed was, in the end, a highly autocratic despotism, generally benign but occasionally predatory. Independence, when it arrived, was, in retrospect, a tragedy. Somaliland was absorbed into Somalia and a governmental style which suited the conditions of the Protectorate was dissolved into something very different. Since the collapse of Somalia, re-emergent Somaliland appears to be attempting to re-connect to a past remembered as something of a golden age.

Highly topical, as Somaliland is re-emerging, this book is an invaluable resource for students and scholars of African History, Imperial History and British History.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|17 pages

Somaliland and Somalis

chapter 2|55 pages

Administration 1920–1938

‘Combining efficiency with cheapness' 1

chapter 3|29 pages

Development 1920–1938

chapter 4|13 pages

Fiasco, 1938–1941

chapter 5|37 pages

Military Administration 1941–1948

chapter 6|16 pages

Development 1941–1948

chapter 7|54 pages

Administration 1948–1960

chapter 8|33 pages

Development 1948–1960

chapter 9|30 pages

Constitutional Development 1952–1960

chapter 10|9 pages

After the end

chapter 11|3 pages

Conclusion