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IMPERIAL TRANSITION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   131918


Imperial transition, Indianisation and race: developing national navies in the subcontinent, 1947-64 / Spence, Daniel Owen   Journal Article
Spence, Daniel Owen Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article examines the colonial legacies in the development of the Indian and Pakistani navies following Independence. As both navies struggled with problems of indigenising their forces, Britain endeavoured to maintain its regional hegemony by extending the professional dependency of both. The influence of imperial ideologies and racial discourses of power on these relationships and on Indian naval identity caused India's and Pakistan's navies to evolve in different directions, as did Cold War geopolitics and civil-military relations. By analysing the challenges faced by India in achieving strategic independence, this article widens existing debates surrounding the neo-colonialism of Indian governance and education during the Nehruvian period, the reinvigoration of Empire and the limits of British imperial power after World War II.
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2
ID:   145214


Observing the imperial transition: British naval reports on the Philippines, 1898-1901 / Elizalde, María-Dolores   Article
Elizalde, María-Dolores Article
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Summary/Abstract In 1898, the Philippines ceased to be a Spanish colony and were annexed by the United States, ignoring the Philippine expectation to gain national independence. Based on novel archival sources this article re-examines the experience of that imperial transition in the Philippines from British perspectives.
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