One Hundred Million Frenchmen: The “Assimilation” Theory in French Colonial Policy
- 1 January 1962
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Comparative Studies in Society and History
- Vol. 4 (2) , 129-153
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417500001304
Abstract
During World War II, Jacques Stern, a former French Minister of Colonies, wrote almost lyrically of the “patient labor of assimilation” by which France had been “consolidating the moral and material ties which bind together forty million continental Frenchmen and sixty million overseas Frenchmen, white and colored” in the French Empire. When the Brazzaville Conference met in 1944 under the auspices of the Free French government to consider the postwar future of that empire, its final resolution declared that the aims of the work of colonization which France is pursuing in her colonies exclude any idea of autonomy and any possibility of development outside the French empirebloc; the attainment of self-government in the colonies even in themost distant future must be excluded.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Education In Overseas FranceCurrent History, 1958
- Must we rewrite the history of imperialism?Historical Studies: Australia and New Zealand, 1953
- French Colonial Policy--the Decline of "Association"The Journal of Modern History, 1933