Global Decolonization: A Comparative Study Guide for Students
Decolonization in Africa refers to the processes by which African territories ended colonial rule and became independent states. This material summarizes how different African countries gained independence, the colonial powers they faced, and the types of regimes that emerged. It breaks the topic into manageable sections, gives practical examples, and highlights patterns across regions.
Definition: Decolonization — the process by which a colony gains political independence from a colonial power.
Definition: Protectorate — a territory that maintains its own local rulers but is controlled in foreign affairs or defense by a stronger power.
| Region | Country (Capital) | Colonial power | How independence was obtained | Type of regime after independence | Decade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Africa | Libya (Tripoli) | Italy | Peaceful (UN recommendation) | Constitutional monarchy, then military dictatorship | 1950s |
| North Africa | Algeria (Algiers) | France | Armed conflict (1954–1962) | Republic, then military dictatorship | 1960s |
| North Africa | Tunisia (Tunis) | France | Negotiations, mass action | Republic | 1950s |
| North Africa | Morocco (Rabat) | France / Spain | Escalating resistance, negotiations | Constitutional monarchy | 1950s |
| North Africa | Western Sahara (El Aaiun) | Spain | Armed conflict (Polisario Front) | Self-proclaimed Sahrawi Arab Republic (disputed) | 1970s |
| West Africa | Ghana (Accra) | United Kingdom | Peaceful | Democratic republic | 1950s |
| West Africa | Nigeria (Abuja) | United Kingdom | Peaceful | Democratic republic / military regimes | 1960s |
| East Africa | Tanzania (Dodoma) | United Kingdom | Peaceful (Tanganyika + Zanzibar) | Republic | 1960s |
| East Africa | Kenya (Nairobi) | United Kingdom | Armed |
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Klíčová slova: 20th Century Decolonisation and Independence Processes, African decolonization and independence
Klíčové pojmy: Many African states gained independence through negotiation or UN mediation in the 1950s–1960s, Armed liberation wars were common against Portugal and in Algeria, Angola, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, Post-independence regimes varied: republics, monarchies, military dictatorships, and settler-led regimes, Morocco retained a constitutional monarchy after negotiations with France and Spain, Tanzania was formed by a voluntary merger of Tanganyika and Zanzibar in the 1960s, Western Sahara remains a disputed territory after Spain’s withdrawal and the 1975 Green March, Colonial power influenced the mode of independence: Britain often negotiated transfers, Portugal faced guerrilla wars, UN involvement and international pressure accelerated some independence processes in the 1950s–1960s, Economic strain on European powers after WWII reduced capacity to maintain colonies, Ethnic divisions and settler communities shaped many post-independence conflicts