Cooperation and empire: local realities of global processes
Introduction: cooperation and empire: local realities of global processes -- Chapter 1. Caciques: indigenous ruler and the colonial regime in Yucatán in the sixteenth century -- Chapter 2. Connecting Worlds: women and the intermediaries in Portuguese overseas empire, 1500-1600 -- Chapter 3. Cooperation and cultural adaption: British diplomats at the court of the Nizam of Hyderabad, c. 1779-1815 -- Chapter 4. Local cooperation in a subversive colony: Martinique 1802-1809 -- Chapter 5. Uncle Toms and Kupapas: 'collaboration' versus alliance in a nineteenth-century New Zealand context -- Chapter 6. 'Collaboration' or sabotage? The settlers in German Southwest Africa between colonial state and indigenous polities -- Chapter 7. Chieftaincy as a political resource in the German colony of Cameroon, 1884-1916; Chapter 8. Cooperation at its limits: re-reading the British constitution in South Africa -- Chapter 9. Key alliance? 'Native guards' and European administrators in sub-Saharan Africa from a comparative perspective (1918-1959) -- Chapter 10. The cooperation between the British and Faisal I of Iraq (1921-1932): evolution of a romance -- Chapter 11. Collaborating on unequal terms: cross-cultural cooperation and educational work in colonial Sudan, 1934-1956 -- Chapter 12. Indigenous agents of colonial rule in Africa and India: defining the colonial state through its secondary bureaucracy -- Chapter 13. Indigenous cooperation: foundation of colonial empires or new historical myth? -- Index