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VOLUME 44 | ISSUE 1 | 2020 JOURNAL OF IMPERIAL AND GLOBAL · volume. The 2020 subscription price...

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ISSN: 0165-1153 JOURNAL OF IMPERIAL AND GLOBAL INTERACTIONS VOLUME 44 | ISSUE 1 | 2020 of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0165115320000121 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 54.39.106.173, on 03 Jun 2021 at 13:41:53, subject to the Cambridge Core terms
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  • VOLUME 44 | ISSUE 1 | 2020

    ISSN: 0165-1153

    Cambridge Journals OnlineFor further information about this journal please go to the journal web site at: journals.cambridge.org/iti

    VO

    LUME 44 | ISSUE 1| 2020

    provides a platform for scholars researching

    the history of imperial and global interactions. Published for the Leiden

    University Institute for History and mindful of the University’s entangled

    history with empire and colonialism, we encourage authors to take a

    global perspective. We aim to publish contributions which critically

    evaluate histories of empires, institutions, ideas, and networks across

    the globe, and the ways in which their legacies continue to shape the

    contemporary world.

    Itinerario is affiliated with the Leiden Institute of Area Studies (LIAS) and the forum on European Expansion and Global Interaction (FEEGI)

    in the US.

    The United National Independence

    Party protests the visit of Ian

    Macleod, Secretary of State for

    the Colonies, to Northern Rhodesia

    in March 1960. The “Year of

    Africa”, now itself sixty years in

    the past, saw the independence of

    seventeen African nations as well

    as widespread anticolonial protests

    in others. Image courtesy National

    Archives, UK, CO 1069-125-10.

    JOURNAL OF IMPERIAL AND GLOBAL

    INTERACTIONS

    VOLUME 44 | ISSUE 1 | 2020

    Itinerario cover 1 2020 Cambridge.indd 1 23-04-20 15:47

    of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0165115320000121Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 54.39.106.173, on 03 Jun 2021 at 13:41:53, subject to the Cambridge Core terms

    https://www.cambridge.org/core/termshttps://doi.org/10.1017/S0165115320000121https://www.cambridge.org/core

  • For over forty years, Itinerario has provided a platform for scholars researching the history of imperial and global interactions. Published for the Leiden University Institute for History and mindful of the University’s entangled history with empire and colonialism, we encourage authors to take a global perspective. We aim to publish contributions which critically evaluate histories of empires, institutions, ideas, and networks across the globe, and the ways in which their legacies continue to shape the contemporary world. Itinerario is committed to sharing the results of academic research through a liberal green open access policy.

    EDITORSCarolien Stolte, Leiden University (editor-in-chief)Anne-Isabelle Richard, Leiden University (managing editor)Mary Russell (copy-editor)Rajeshwari Dutt, Indian Institute of Technology MandiElizabeth Heijmans, Leiden University Martine van Ittersum, University of DundeeGijs Kruijtzer, Leiden UniversityKris Lane, Tulane UniversityCharles Reed, Elizabeth City State UniversityCyrus Schayegh, The Graduate Institute, GenevaAndreas Weber, University of Twente

    BOOK REVIEW EDITORKate Law, University of Nottingham ([email protected]) Elizabeth Lhost, Dartmouth College ([email protected]) Santiago Munoz Arbelaez, Universidad de los Andes, Bogota ([email protected]) Adolfo Polo y la Borda, Universidad de los Andes, Bogota ([email protected])

    EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSTristan Mostert, Leiden UniversityViola Müller, Leiden University

    ADVISORY BOARDLauren Benton, New York UniversityLeonard Blussé, Leiden UniversityJos Gommans, Leiden UniversityWillem Klooster, Clark UniversitySandrine Kott, University of Geneva Liat Kozma, The Hebrew University of JerusalemCorinne A. Pernet, University of Geneva Om Prakash, Delhi School of EconomicsNadeera Rupesinghe, Director of the National Archives of Sri LankaNigel Worden, University of Cape Town

    Itinerario is published by Cambridge University Press for the Leiden Institute for History, Leiden University, The Netherlands.

    SUBSCRIPTIONSItinerario (ISSN 0165-1153) is published three times a year in April, August and December. The three parts form one annual volume. The 2020 subscription price for volume 44, which includes print and electronic access, is £137.00 (US $265.00 in USA, Canada and Mexico, €165.00 in Eurozone Europe). The electronic-only price available to institutions is £119.00 (US $230.00 in USA, Canada and Mexico, €146.00 in Euro-zone Europe). Individuals may purchase a print-only subscription at the reduced rate of £55.00 (US $124.00 in USA, Canada and Mexico, €69.00 in Euro-zone Europe), ordering directly from the publisher and certifying that the journal is for their personal use. Single parts are priced at £53.00 (US $102.00 in USA, Canada and Mexico, €63 in Euro-zone Europe) plus postage.

    FEEGI members may purchase a print only subscription at the reduced rate of £32.00 ($71 in USA, Canada and Mexico, €39.00 in Euro-zone Europe).

    All prices include delivery, by air if appropriate, and exclude VAT. EU subscribers (outside the UK) who are not registered for VAT should add VAT at their country’s rate. VAT registered members should provide their VAT registration number. Japanese prices for institutions (including ASP delivery) are available from Kinokuniya Company Ltd, P.O. Box 55, Chitose, Tokyo 156, Japan.

    Orders, which must be accompanied by payment, may be sent to a bookseller, subscription agent or direct to the publisher: Cambridge University Press, Journals Fulfi lment Department, UPH, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS, UK.; or in the USA, Canada and Mexico: Cambridge University Press, Journal Fulfi llment Department, 1 Liberty Plaza, New York, NY 10006, United States, USA.

    Information on Itinerario can be accessed via https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/itinerario

    © Leiden Institute for HistoryISSN 0165-1153E-ISSN 2041-2827

    This journal issue has been printed on FSC-certifi ed paper and cover board. FSC is an independent, non-governmental, not-for-profi t organisation established to promote the responsible management of the world’s forests. Please see www.fsc.org for information.

    Printed in Great Britain by Bell & Bain Ltd, Glasgow

    ItinerarioJOURNAL OF IMPERIAL AND GLOBAL INTERACTIONS

    SUBMISSION OF ARTICLESIf you want to submit an article for our editors to look at, please send it to:[email protected]

    Authors submitting work to Itinerario are advised to follow the submission guidelines as closely as possible to minimise editorial changes to their work and thus minimise the chance of introducing errors inadvertently into your writing. The guidelines are based on and are similar to the recommendations found in the internationally known and respected Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, and readers are encouraged to refer to that work should they require clarifi cation. Likewise, they can always address any particular questions to the editors at [email protected].

    Submission guidelines can be found at https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/itinerario/information/instructions-contributors

    COPYINGThis journal is registered with the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, USA. Organisations in the USA who are also registered with the C.C.C. may,

    therefore copy material (beyond the limits permitted by, sections 107 and 108 of U.S. Copyright law) subject to payment to the C.C.C of the per copy fee of $15.00. This consent does not extend to multiple copying for promotional or commercial purposes. Code 0165-1153/15. ISI Tear Sheet Service, 3501 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA, is authorised to supply single copies of separate articles for private use only. Organisations authorised by the Copyright Licensing Agency may also copy material subject to the usual conditions. For all other use, permission should be sought from Cambridge or from the American Branch of Cambridge University Press.

    Cover design: Anton Feddema, Amsterdam. Illustration: Courtesy of Cornell University – PJ Mode Collection of Persuasive Cartography, no. 1108.01.

    Effective Vol. 33 (2009), Itinerario - Journal of Imperial and Global Interactions, is being covered by the Clarivate Journal Citation Report.

    01651153_44-1.indd All Pages01651153_44-1.indd All Pages 24/04/20 12:07 PM24/04/20 12:07 PM

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  • Itinerariovolume xliv issue 1, 2020

    SPECIAL ISSUE

    VIOLENCE, MIGRATION, AND GENDER IN THE PORTUGUESE-AND SPANISH-SPEAKING WORLD. LOCAL IMPACTS, GLOBAL

    PROCESSES, AND THE ECHOES OF EMPIRE, 1945–2019

    GUEST EDITOR:

    ANDREAS STUCKI

    , available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0165115320000121Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 54.39.106.173, on 03 Jun 2021 at 13:41:53, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use

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  • Contents

    INTERVIEW1 Maarten Manse, Sander Tetteroo and Remco Raben, “Changing Perspectives on the Hidden

    Giant: An Interview with Robert Cribb”

    INTRODUCTION18 Andreas Stucki, “Introduction: Violence, Migration, and Gender in the Portuguese- and

    Spanish-Speaking World, 1945–2019”

    ARTICLES33 Enrique Bengochea Tirado and Francesco Correale, “Modernising Violence and Social

    Change in the Spanish Sahara (1957–1975)”

    55 Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo, “A Robust Operation: Resettling, Security, and Development inLate Colonial Angola (1960s–1970s)”

    80 Alexander Keese, “Imagining a Better Future: Anti-colonial Protest and Social Debates inSanto Antão, Cabo Verde, 1945–1975”

    105 Imagining a Better Future: Anti-colonial Protest and Social Debates in Santo Antão, CaboVerde, 1945–1975 – ERRATUM

    106 Susana Trovão and Sandra Araújo, “Ambivalent Relationships: The Portuguese State and theIndian Nationals in Mozambique in the Aftermath of the Goa Crisis, 1961–1971”

    140 Yolanda Aixelà Cabré, “The Presence of the Colonial Past: Equatorial Guinean Women inSpain”

    159 Elizabeth Buettner, “Europeanising Migration in Multicultural Spain and Portugal Duringand After the Decolonisation Era”

    178 Jeff Pardue, “Antislavery and Imperialism: The British Suppression of the Slave Trade andthe Opening of Fernando Po, 1827–1829”

    196 Guanmian Xu, “Junks to Mare Clausum: China-Maluku Connections in the Spice Wars,1607–1622”

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    OFC.pdfIFC.pdf


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