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The district officer - the D.O. - was the pivot of the British
Colonial Administration throughout the British Empire, as was his
counterpart in India - immortalized in Philip Woodruff's "The Men
who Ruled India". The D.O. who was both administrator and
magistrate and the essential link with the professional and
technical services and essentially, with the indigenous population
- the 600,000,000 people they served - in an empire of service
rather than domination. In this book, Anthony Kirk-Greene, who was
himself a distinguished member of the Nigeria Service, draws upon
personal memoirs, diaries, private and official papers, and his own
experience, to paint a vivid picture of the service and a
never-to-be-repeated episode in British history.
In this book, Anthony Kirk-Greene, who served as a district officer
in Nigeria for over a decade, draws upon personal memoirs, diaries,
private and official papers, and his own experience, to paint a
vivid picture of the service from his perspective. Symbol of
Authority explores the socio-educational status of district
officers, their recruitment and training, and what they did in both
their work and leisure.
The British Empire was the most powerful empire known to the modern
world, but power and confidence were ebbing by the mid-20th
century. Aspects of Empire, a second anthology of writings from the
Corona Club journal, shows the British Parliament, Government, the
Colonial Office and leading actors preparing for decolonisation.
This was against a backdrop of ever-growing needs in the
territories when imperial resources were increasingly limited -
reflecting Britain's diminished position especially following World
War II. There were the political demands of future self-government,
the implication of Colonial Development and Welfare acts, defence,
policing and even 'emergencies'. And all these factors impacted
upon work in the territories and looked forward to the end of the
Colonial and Overseas Services in the vital field of district
administration and in the professional and technical departments.
Here is an illuminating account of the management of the end of a
global empire and preparation for self-government - a drama no less
striking for being couched in form of Parliamentary debate, and
state papers.
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