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Uncommon Wealth: Britain and the aftermath Of Empire
[Paperback - 2023]
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Category: History
Sub-category: European History
Publisher: John Murray Uk | ISBN: 9781529338645 | Pages: 304
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Shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for Political Writing
Longlisted for the British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding
A Guardian Book of the Year

Brilliantly arranged and rich with fresh insights Akala

A radical, beautifully written understanding of our history Owen Jones

You can t understand how Britain works today without reading it Frankie Boyle

A challenge to a nation living in the shadow of empire: reckon with your imperial past, or it will come back to bite you Grace Blakeley

This book should be part of the national curriculum Ellie Mae O Hagan

Britain didn t just put the empire back the way it had found it.

In Uncommon Wealth, Kojo Koram traces the tale of how after the end of the British empire an interconnected group of well-heeled British intellectuals, politicians, accountants and lawyers offshored their capital, seized assets and saddled debt in former dependencies . This enabled horrific inequality across the globe as ruthless capitalists profited and ordinary people across Britain s former territories in colonial Africa, Asia and the Caribbean were trapped in poverty. However, the reinforcement of capitalist power across the world also ricocheted back home. Now it has left many Britons wondering where their own sovereignty and prosperity has gone...

Decolonisation was not just a trendy buzzword. It was one of the great global changes of the past hundred years, yet Britain - the protagonist in the whole, messy drama - has forgotten it was ever even there. A blistering uncovering of the scandal of Britain s disastrous treatment of independent countries after empire, Uncommon Wealth shows the decisions of decades past are contributing to the forces that are breaking Britain today.

Dr Kojo Koram is a lecturer at the School of Law at Birkbeck College, University of London. He is the editor of The War on Drugs and the Global Color Line. Prior to academia, Kojo worked in social welfare law, youth work and teaching. Kojo has written for the Guardian, the Washington Post, the Nation, Dissent, the New Statesman and Critical Legal Thinking.

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