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Power and public health in colonial Nigeria

Event information>

Dates

This is a past event
Time
4:00 pm to 5:15 pm
Location

Online

Institute

Institute of Historical Research

Event type

Seminar

Event series

History and Public Health

Speakers

Adebisi Alade (University of Victoria)

Contact

Email only

Our two speakers in this seminar take a fresh look at the motivations and effects of colonial public health campaigns in Nigeria, in the first half of the twentieth century.

Olúwaṣeun Williams will discuss the pathologisation by colonial experts of Nigerian (and other ‘tropical’) diets from the 1920s onwards, and the campaigns to ‘improve’ and modernise the diet of colonised peoples that ensued. Beneath the professed humanitarian goals of these campaigns, colonial capitalist interests held sway. 

Adebisi Alade will examine colonial sanitation laws, methods of enforcement, and their unintended outcomes, in Nigeria in the early twentieth century. Public health programmes were designed to transform Africans into ‘environmentally responsible subjects,’ but the uses of state power in practice – and the complaints that they generated – highlight the complex relationships between colonisers and the colonised, and among Africans of different social classes.


All welcome

- this session is free to attend but booking is required.


This page was last updated on 14 March 2025