Routledge Library Editions: Colonialism and Imperialism: Routledge Library Editions: Colonialism and Imperialism
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032410548
ISBN-10: 103241054X
Pagini: 16474
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 30.64 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Library Editions: Colonialism and Imperialism
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 103241054X
Pagini: 16474
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 30.64 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Library Editions: Colonialism and Imperialism
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate and UndergraduateCuprins
1. A History of Ghana W.E.F. Ward 2. A History of the Georgian People W.E.D. Allen 3. Black Flags in Vietnam: The Story of a Chinese Intervention Henry McAleavy 4. Britain's Army in India James P. Lawford 5. British Colonial Policy in the Age of Peel and Russell W.P. Morrell 6. British Honduras: Past and Present Stephen L. Caiger 7. British Imperialism and Australia, 1783–1833 Brian Fitzpatrick 8. British India's Relations with the Kingdom of Nepal, 1857–1947 Asad Husain 9. British Policy Towards the Indian States 1905–1939 S.R. Ashton 10. The British West Indies: The Search for Self-Government Morley Ayearst 11. Buddhism, Imperialism and War: Burma and Thailand in Modern History Trevor Ling 12. Capitalism and Colonial Production Hamza Alavi, P.L. Burns, G.R. Knight, P.B. Mayer and Doug McEachern 13. Chatham's Colonial Kate Hotblack 14. Clive, Proconsul of India James P. Lawford 15. Colonial Africa A.J. Christopher 16. The Colonial Office Sir Charles Jeffries 17. Colonial Planning: A Comparative Study Barbu Niculescu 18. Colonial Sequence 1930 to 1949 Margery Perham 19. Colonial Sequence 1949 to 1969 Margery Perham 20. Colonialism and Underdevelopment in Ghana Rhoda Howard 21. Crime, Justice and Society in Colonial Sri Lanka John D. Rogers 22. Dual Legacies in the Contemporary Caribbean Edited by Paul Sutton 23. Early Records of British India J. Talboys Wheeler 24. East Africa: A Century of Change 1870–1970 W.E.F. Ward and L.W. White 25. Emergent Africa W.E.F. Ward 26. The English and Colonial Bars in the Nineteenth Century Daniel Duman 27. Fabian Colonial Essays Edited by Rita Hinden 28. The Gambia Colony and Protectorate Francis Bisset Archer 29. Government in West Africa W.E.F. Ward 30. History of Nigeria Sir Alan Burns 31. History of the British West Indies Sir Alan Burns 32. History of the Conquest of Peru William Prescott. New Revised Edition Edited by John Foster Kirk 33. Imperialism and Social Reform Bernard Semmel 34. In Defence of British India: Great Britain in the Middle East, 1775–1842 Edward Ingram 35. James Smith: The Making of a Colonial Culture Lurline Stuart 36. Local Government in West Africa Ronald Wraith 37. Malta and the End of Empire Dennis Austin 38. The Palestinians in Israel: A Study in Internal Colonialism Elia T. Zureik 39. Parliament as an Export Edited by Sir Alan Burns 40. Perspectives on Imperialism and Decolonization Edited by R.F. Holland and G. Rivzi 41.Prelude to Imperialism: British Reactions to Central African Society, 1840–1890 H. Alan C. Cairns 42. Race, Power and Social Segmentation in Colonial Society: Guyana After Slavery, 1838–1891 Brian L. Moore 43. The Ruins of Time: Four and a Half Centuries of Conquest and Discovery Among the Maya David Adamson 44. The Struggle for Asia 1828–1914: A Study in British and Russian Imperialism David Gillard 45. Turning Point in Africa: British Colonial Policy 1938–48 R.D. Pearce 46. The Twilight of European Colonialism Stewart C. Easton 47. Vasco da Gama and his Successors, 1460–1580 K.G. Jayne 48. West Africa: Quest for God and Gold, 1454–1578 John W. Blake 49. Where the Waves Fall: A New South Sea Islands History from First Settlement to Colonial Rule K.R. Howe 50. The World Today W.E.F. Ward 51. The Yoruba-Speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast of West Africa A.B. Ellis
Descriere
RLE: Colonialism and Imperialism is a 51-volume collection of previously out-of-print titles that examine the history, practice and implications of Western colonialism around the globe. From the earliest contact by European explorers to the legacies that remain today, these books look at various aspects of worldwide colonialism.
Notă biografică
Various authors.
Original Series Editors:
David Canter is Emeritus Professor at The University of Liverpool, UK. Having set up the first MSc in Environmental Psychology at The University of Surrey in 1972, he went on to establish the Journal of Environmental Psychology in 1980, editing it for 20 years. Soon after he founded the International Association of People-Environment Studies (IAPS). David has published widely on many aspects of human interactions with their surroundings; his 1977 book The Psychology of Place, being one of the most cited publications in the area.
David Stea is Professor Emeritus of Geography and International Studies at Texas State University and Research Associate with the Center for Global Justice in Mexico. As Carnegie Interdisciplinary Fellow at Brown University from 1964 to 1966, he developed the new field of Environmental Psychology and the related study of spatial and geographic cognition. David is a member of the editorial boards of a number of journals, the co-author or co-editor of several books and author of some 150 articles and book chapters on various subjects, including sustainable development and environmental issues in Latin America. In 1987 he was nominated for the Right Livelihood Prize (also known as the “alternative Nobel”) for his international work with indigenous peoples.
Original Series Editors:
David Canter is Emeritus Professor at The University of Liverpool, UK. Having set up the first MSc in Environmental Psychology at The University of Surrey in 1972, he went on to establish the Journal of Environmental Psychology in 1980, editing it for 20 years. Soon after he founded the International Association of People-Environment Studies (IAPS). David has published widely on many aspects of human interactions with their surroundings; his 1977 book The Psychology of Place, being one of the most cited publications in the area.
David Stea is Professor Emeritus of Geography and International Studies at Texas State University and Research Associate with the Center for Global Justice in Mexico. As Carnegie Interdisciplinary Fellow at Brown University from 1964 to 1966, he developed the new field of Environmental Psychology and the related study of spatial and geographic cognition. David is a member of the editorial boards of a number of journals, the co-author or co-editor of several books and author of some 150 articles and book chapters on various subjects, including sustainable development and environmental issues in Latin America. In 1987 he was nominated for the Right Livelihood Prize (also known as the “alternative Nobel”) for his international work with indigenous peoples.
Recenzii
“The timely re-issue of the prescient Ethnoscapes series provides an invaluable contribution to current concerns about built and natural environments. The breadth of coverage of these books, includes public participation in environmental modifications, the impact of housing design on the quality of life, cross-cultural comparisons of placemaking, and the role of building aesthetics on well-being, across many countries and contexts adds up to a treasure trove of innovative research. Now more than ever we need the benefit of the insights and findings of these scholars and professional (many of course who are both) who, over three decades, have studied crucial aspects of interactions between people and their surroundings.”
Ricardo García Mira, Professor of Social Psychology, University of A Coruna, Galicia, Spain. Former Spanish MP.
“The reissued volumes in the Ethnoscapes series were ground- breaking when they first appeared and remain fresh today. These books are essential for understanding how design and the use of space has cultural and human meaning that “artificial intelligence” could never achieve. They offer a vital and timely antidote to mind-numbing apology for the appropriation of civic space and corporate reproduction of McMansions and shopping malls.”
Ben Wisner, Honorary Visiting Professor, University College London, UK.
“The physical aspects of our wonderfully complex world combine with social and psychological factors, to give a myriad of joys and sorrows accompanying our lifeworld activities. To make existence manageable, we need to find order within such chaos. As researchers of all types, but especially social scientists, we are driven to identify networks of causes and effects. This series provides excellent examples of such writing, concerning natural and built environments, from a host of scholars, representing a range of disciplines.”
Andrew Turk, Adjunct Associate Professor, Murdoch University, Western Australia.
“People interested and concerned about how we are interacting with and shaping our built and natural environments will find the insights and findings in this re-issued Ethnoscapes series of great value. Over more than 30 years this accumulated cornucopia of research reveals how important it is to understand the meanings and significance of many aspects of human- environment transactions. These include studies of user involvement in design, with its implications for place-making, as well as crucial explorations of the meaning of home and the role of environmental aesthetics for our wellbeing. Every volume opens new doors, often being the forerunners to major areas of study.”
Arza Churchman, Professor Emerita at Technion- Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel.
“The re-issue of the Ethnoscapes series provides everyone who cares about human-environment studies a wonderful opportunity to re-acquaint themselves with many groundbreaking efforts in the field. The series provides a wide range of explorations by researchers who have helped to make sense of persons in interaction with their surroundings, and contributed to inspired placemaking”.
Robert Gifford, Professor of Psychology and Environmental Studies, University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Ricardo García Mira, Professor of Social Psychology, University of A Coruna, Galicia, Spain. Former Spanish MP.
“The reissued volumes in the Ethnoscapes series were ground- breaking when they first appeared and remain fresh today. These books are essential for understanding how design and the use of space has cultural and human meaning that “artificial intelligence” could never achieve. They offer a vital and timely antidote to mind-numbing apology for the appropriation of civic space and corporate reproduction of McMansions and shopping malls.”
Ben Wisner, Honorary Visiting Professor, University College London, UK.
“The physical aspects of our wonderfully complex world combine with social and psychological factors, to give a myriad of joys and sorrows accompanying our lifeworld activities. To make existence manageable, we need to find order within such chaos. As researchers of all types, but especially social scientists, we are driven to identify networks of causes and effects. This series provides excellent examples of such writing, concerning natural and built environments, from a host of scholars, representing a range of disciplines.”
Andrew Turk, Adjunct Associate Professor, Murdoch University, Western Australia.
“People interested and concerned about how we are interacting with and shaping our built and natural environments will find the insights and findings in this re-issued Ethnoscapes series of great value. Over more than 30 years this accumulated cornucopia of research reveals how important it is to understand the meanings and significance of many aspects of human- environment transactions. These include studies of user involvement in design, with its implications for place-making, as well as crucial explorations of the meaning of home and the role of environmental aesthetics for our wellbeing. Every volume opens new doors, often being the forerunners to major areas of study.”
Arza Churchman, Professor Emerita at Technion- Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel.
“The re-issue of the Ethnoscapes series provides everyone who cares about human-environment studies a wonderful opportunity to re-acquaint themselves with many groundbreaking efforts in the field. The series provides a wide range of explorations by researchers who have helped to make sense of persons in interaction with their surroundings, and contributed to inspired placemaking”.
Robert Gifford, Professor of Psychology and Environmental Studies, University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.