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Articles

Small Wars and Pacification in the British Empire: A Case Study of Lushai Hills, 1850–1900

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Pages 265-299 | Published online: 12 Oct 2022
 

ABSTRACT

The British Empire was at the height of its power in the late nineteenth century. Most scholars focus on imperial expansion. However, not much light has been shed on the process of consolidation, which I term pacification. This paper tries to cover this historiographical slip by making a case study of British pacification of the Lushai Hills of North-East India. While analysing this micro region, I shall contextualise it within the broader policies of the British imperium. Both Callwell and some of the modern commentators are wrong in asserting that British Empire building involved a display of brute force in curbing the insurrectionary natives. Overall, British consolidation policy was more complex. Repeated application of a moderate amount of violence through the medium of small war prepared the ground for pacification. The non-military components of pacification (construction of roads, schools and a job creation programme) are equivalent to what modern-day scholars term winning the hearts and minds of the populace of the disturbed regions. Use of proportionate force and implementation of certain non-military schemes enabled a small number of white men to rule over millions of brown people for more than a century.

Acknowledgements

I am grateful to three of my research scholars, Dr Moumita Chowdhury, Mr Aryama Ghosh and Ms Sohini Mitra, for providing me with some of the materials used in this paper. The author is Guru Nanak Chair Professor at the Department of History, Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India, and a Global Fellow at the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Norway. The research is done at both the institutions.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

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