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Dive into the research topics where Gavin Rand is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gavin Rand.


Patterns of Prejudice | 2012

Recruiting the ‘martial races’: identities and military service in colonial India

Gavin Rand; Kim A. Wagner

ABSTRACT British rule in India was entirely reliant on local troops, and the mobilization and recruitment of Indian communities gave rise to a multiplicity of discourses, traditions and identities reflecting the peculiar relationship between colonial power and indigenous military labour. Through the late nineteenth century, these discourses became increasingly racialized: only certain native communities were deemed to possess the ‘spirit’ necessary for military service. These so-called ‘martial races’—including Nepalese Gurkhas, Punjabi Sikhs and Muslims from the northern and frontier provinces—provided the backbone of the imperial military and played a vital role in defending and extending colonial authority. By the early twentieth century, the racialized nature of soldiering in India was invoked to explain the composition of imperial forces and to legitimize the preservation of colonial rule. While the theory of ‘martial races’ is the subject of an increasingly diverse literature, relatively little attention has been paid to the practice—and practical origins—of restricted recruitment. In this article Rand and Wagner seek to re-examine the role of martial-race theories in British recruitment policies and practices in colonial India, drawing attention to the incoherence and complexity that marked the relationship between ideas of race and the practicalities of colonial military administration. They focus in particular on long-term patterns of continuities, rather than neat periodizations, and suggest that racialized discourses regarding soldiering have to be considered within the context of mutually advantageous relationships between the colonial state and its indigenous allies.


The Historical Journal | 2017

Coercion and conciliation at the edge of empire: state-building and its limits in Waziristan, 1849-1914

Gavin Rand; Mark Condos

This paper proposes an alternative history of the colonial frontier. Focussing on Waziristan, the paper challenges prevailing understandings of colonial frontier policy by demonstrating important and widely-overlooked continuities in colonial engagements with the people and territory of the frontier.


Archive | 2017

Culture, Conflict and the Military in Colonial South Asia

Kaushik Roy; Gavin Rand


Archive | 2017

Introduction: Warfare, culture and society in colonial South Asia

Kaushik Roy; Gavin Rand


Archive | 2016

‘From the Black Mountain to Waziristan’: culture and combat on the North-West frontier

Gavin Rand


Archive | 2013

Military aspects of Indian uprising

Gavin Rand; Crispin Bates


Archive | 2013

Reconstructing the imperial military after the rebellion

Gavin Rand


Archive | 2013

Introduction: The 'subaltern at arms'

Gavin Rand; Crispin Bates


Archive | 2013

Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857: Volume IV: Military Aspects of the Indian Uprising

Crispin Bates; Gavin Rand


Journal of Victorian Culture | 2012

Transnational Dialogues: Antoinette Burton and the Rewritings of British Imperial History

Gavin Rand

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Crispin Bates

Center for Global Development

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Kim A. Wagner

Queen Mary University of London

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