ABSTRACT

Written by a member of the last generation of British Colonial Service Officers in Africa, the book seeks to place both colonial rulers and their African successors in the context of history and the circumstances of their time, viewing their achievements and failures critically but not unsympathetically and comparing colonial society with that of the independent African country that Northern Rhodesia has become. Colonialism is viewed at the day to day level of the administration of a rural district by four officers and a handful of African district messengers, who worked together without even a telephone to assist them. With a wealth of detail that can only come from experience, Grant’s work makes an important contribution to the understanding of a time, place, period and practices that are only now being considered in a balanced way.

chapter 1|10 pages

BEGINNINGS

chapter 2|10 pages

PEOPLE AND POWERS

chapter 3|8 pages

THE PLACE

chapter 4|18 pages

LAW AND ORDER

chapter 5|14 pages

THE JOB

chapter 6|26 pages

Africans 95

chapter 7|12 pages

DISTRICT OFFICER ON TOUR

chapter 8|8 pages

EVENTS

chapter 9|10 pages

DOMESTIC ARRANGEMENTS AND PASTIMES

chapter 10|14 pages

REFLECTIONS

chapter 11|6 pages

ENDINGS

part |2 pages

PART B FROM BRITISH COLONY TO INDEPENDENCE AND BEYOND

chapter 12|18 pages

Zambian Politics, 1950 to 2006

part |2 pages

PART C ZAMBIA NOW: IMPRESSIONS OF A FORMER DISTRICT OFFICER, RETURNING 45 YEARS LATER

chapter 4|16 pages

TEEN ZAMBIA’S ECONOMY

chapter 15|10 pages

FROM THEN TO NOW: WHAT HAS CHANGED