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A View of the Art of Colonization

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A View of the Art of Colonization Synopsis

Edward Gibbon Wakefield (1796–1862) was a controversial colonial advocate and political theorist, who was the driving force behind the early colonization of New Zealand and South Australia. Barred from entering parliament after serving a three-year sentence in Newgate Prison, Wakefield read widely on contemporary economics and social questions, developing his influential theory of colonization. He formed the New Zealand Association in 1837 to create a new colony in that country, finally emigrating himself in 1852. This volume, first published in 1849, contains an explanation of Wakefield's philosophy of colonization. Writing in the form of letters to an anonymous statesman, Wakefield fully explores and discusses the social, political and economic aspects of his system of colonization, based on regulating emigration by fixing the price of land. Wakefield's ideas influenced early colonial economic policy in South Australia, and stimulated the development of later theories of colonization.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781108023481
Publication date: 25th November 2010
Author: Edward Gibbon Wakefield
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 542 pages
Series: Cambridge Library Collection - British and Irish History, 19th Century
Genres: Constitution: government and the state