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| Acknowledgements | p. x |
| Publisher's acknowledgements | p. xi |
| Chronology | p. xii |
| Who's who | p. xix |
| Glossary | p. xxxiv |
| Maps | p. xxxviii |
| The Problem | p. 1 |
| Introduction | p. 3 |
| The African Background | p. 5 |
| Environmental factors | p. 6 |
| Egypt | p. 9 |
| Islam | p. 10 |
| The slave trade | p. 14 |
| Southern Africa | p. 14 |
| The Victorian Image of Africa | p. 17 |
| The influence of the slave trade | p. 18 |
| Eighteenth century scientific interest | p. 19 |
| Slave trade versus legitimate trade | p. 21 |
| 'Backward' Africa | p. 22 |
| The missionaries | p. 24 |
| Exploration and its consequences | p. 25 |
| Analysis | p. 31 |
| The British Occupation of Egypt, 1882 | p. 33 |
| The Suez Canal | p. 35 |
| Financial problems | p. 36 |
| Military action begins | p. 40 |
| The debate begins | p. 42 |
| West Africa | p. 44 |
| Quarrels with the Ashanti | p. 45 |
| The challenge from the French | p. 47 |
| The Niger | p. 48 |
| King Leopold of the Belgians intervenes | p. 50 |
| Portugal's claims | p. 51 |
| The Berlin West Africa conference | p. 53 |
| The Royal Niger Company | p. 54 |
| The German challenge | p. 56 |
| The Great Depression | p. 59 |
| East Africa | p. 61 |
| A new Australia | p. 62 |
| The German challenge | p. 63 |
| Strategy versus commerce | p. 64 |
| South Africa | p. 69 |
| The role of the Boers | p. 70 |
| Bechuanaland | p. 72 |
| Gold and diamonds | p. 73 |
| 'Rhodesia' | p. 73 |
| Fashoda and the Anglo-French Agreements of 1904 | p. 79 |
| Fashoda | p. 81 |
| The 1904 agreements | p. 83 |
| Assessment | p. 85 |
| Conclusion | p. 87 |
| Britain: Conservative and Liberal opinion | p. 87 |
| Continental opinion too was divided | p. 88 |
| The debate begins in earnest | p. 89 |
| Lenin takes a hand | p. 90 |
| The role of Africans | p. 94 |
| Documents | p. 97 |
| David Livingstone: humanitarian | p. 98 |
| Commerce | p. 98 |
| Africa as El Dorado | p. 99 |
| Darkest Africa: fully developed racism | p. 100 |
| Stanley's antipathy | p. 101 |
| Suez Canal | p. 102 |
| The Egyptian finances: Stephen Cave's report | p. 103 |
| Divided opinions | p. 105 |
| Egypt in international diplomacy | p. 107 |
| Death of Gordon at Khartoum | p. 109 |
| The desire to abandon responsibilities | p. 110 |
| The fears of British traders | p. 111 |
| The British government's reaction | p. 113 |
| The Berlin West Africa conference lays down the 'rules' for the scramble | p. 114 |
| The Royal Niger Company | p. 115 |
| The Great Depression | p. 118 |
| The mixture of economic and strategic arguments | p. 119 |
| The 'little Englanders' stand on Uganda | p. 121 |
| Cecil Rhodes | p. 122 |
| The Rudd Concession | p. 123 |
| The Colonial Office's doubts about the legality of the British South Africa Company's position | p. 124 |
| The Fashoda incident | p. 125 |
| The Anglo-French agreements of April 1904 | p. 127 |
| J.A. Hobson | p. 128 |
| V.I. Lenin | p. 129 |
| Lord Cromer | p. 129 |
| A modern rejection of traditional explanations of the partition | p. 130 |
| Was the whole phenomenon economic after all? | p. 131 |
| Appendix: European Colonial Background | p. 132 |
| Guide to Further Reading | p. 136 |
| References | p. 146 |
| Index | p. 148 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |