Jacob Ivey Ivey Policing, Race, and the Formation of Nineteenth-Century British Colonial Natal

Policing, Race, and the Formation of Nineteenth-Century British Colonial Natal

von Jacob Ivey

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Beschreibung

This book traces the creation, implementation, and evolution of the police institutions within British colonial Natal during ‘the formative period’ of the colony between 1845 and 1899. It examines how white and Black members of Natal’s colonial community formed their own systems of policing, creating structures of control that combined ideas from across multiple continents that illustrated the way imperial rule was not directed exclusively from the imperial metropole, but instead part of a complex mixing of indigenous and colonial ideals in the forging of colonial Natal. This influence had enormous ramifications for the police institutions in South Africa well into the twentieth century. Using numerous case studies involving the organization, actions, and influence of the police in Natal, this work provides examples of Black power and authority, prison escapes, violence by and against the constabulary, and recruitment and logistics within the colonial police. In the end, it places the history of KwaZulu-Natal centrally into the emergence of British imperial rule in South Africa in the nineteenth century.

Jacob Ivey is an Assistant Professor of History at Florida Memorial University, USA, South Florida’s only Historically Black College and University (HBCU). He received his PhD from West Virginia University, USA. He writes on the British empire in Southern Africa and issues of race in South Africa and the Black Diaspora across the globe. This is his first book.

This book traces the creation, implementation, and evolution of the police institutions within British colonial Natal during ‘the formative period’ of the colony between 1845 and 1899. It examines how white and Black members of Natal’s colonial community formed their own systems of policing, creating structures of control that combined ideas from across multiple continents that illustrated the way imperial rule was not directed exclusively from the imperial metropole, but instead part of a complex mixing of indigenous and colonial ideals in the forging of colonial Natal. This influence had enormous ramifications for the police institutions in South Africa well into the twentieth century. Using numerous case studies involving the organization, actions, and influence of the police in Natal, this work provides examples of Black power and authority, prison escapes, violence by and against the constabulary, and recruitment and logistics within the colonial police. In the end, it places the history of KwaZulu-Natal centrally into the emergence of British imperial rule in South Africa in the nineteenth century.


Explores how policing and security institutions played an important role in the formation of British Colonial Natal Presents real-life case studies which demonstrate instances of crime and logistics within the colonial police Argues that Natal’s system of state control was much more fluid than historians have previously understood

Autor*in

Jacob Ivey

Themen in »Policing, Race, and the Formation of Nineteenth-Century British Colonial Natal«

KwaZulu-Natal South African War Race Colonial Policing Black agency Colonial state formation State control Police institutions Imperial rule Black authority Black constabulary British Empire History of violence British Southern Africa 19th Century Colonial Natal

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Details

ISBN: 9783031337536
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Erscheinung: 03.01.2026

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