Niels Boender
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nielsboender.bsky.social
Niels Boender
@nielsboender.bsky.social
🇳🇱 Historian - Postdoc at the University of Edinburgh looking at socioeconomic rights in Kenya and Tanzania - previously at Warwick, looking at Mau Mau legacies
the national political settlement. It shows how national elites, colonial officials and grassroots "bush politicans" were dragged into a triangular contest over the nature of independence. Give it a read (along with its two predecessors, JAH and CSSAAME)! (4/4)
October 28, 2025 at 12:12 PM
The article takes a deep dive into the life and times of the Nyeri Democratic Party, one of the myriad district parties that formed the former predecessor to national party politics in Kenya. I argue that the NDP reflects the potency of battles over post-conflict justice in shaping (3/4)
October 28, 2025 at 12:12 PM
I'm very grateful to Itinerario, and especially to Drs Tim Livsey and Miguel Bandeira Jerónimo, for putting together this Special Edition that re-evaluates the notion of "late-colonialism". (2/4)
October 28, 2025 at 12:12 PM
I sincerely hope that Kenyans feel represented and heard by the story we tell.

The exhibition is open until March 2026 in Lambeth, South London. Do come along! 6/6
October 19, 2025 at 2:49 PM
It was a privilege to work with brilliant curators, fellow researchers across all three countries, and beyond. Seeing the Mau Mau given space in a museum which is so central to British national identity - not fearing to pause on the violent, unsettling elements - is a real triumph. 5/6
October 19, 2025 at 2:49 PM
and since then as a Co-Curator and Consultant working directly with the exhibition team. From the early brainstorming stages to the editing of the final script, the exhibition is a testament to the power of academic research to shape public history-making. 4/6
October 19, 2025 at 2:49 PM
Working on the exhibition involved extensive new collecting in these three countries, primarily centring on the voices of the remaining survivors of these conflicts. It was a great privilege to be a part of this, first as part of my AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Partnership PhD from 2020-2024... 3/6
October 19, 2025 at 2:49 PM
...evolution in the IWM’s offering, for the first time giving serious consideration to the conflicts that marked the end of the British Empire. It evaluates how the end of the British Empire was a uniquely violent process, leaving legacies for these countries as well as for Britain itself... 2/6
October 19, 2025 at 2:49 PM
Do also have a look at my article published last month, in Comparative Studies in South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East on ex-Mau Mau and ex-loyalist chiefs - also focusing on Nyeri in the 1960s. read.dukeupress.edu/cssaame/arti...
Neo–Mau Mau and Ex-Loyalists: The Politics of Chieftaincy in Central Kenya, 1960–69
Abstract. Anti-colonial conflict and the process of decolonization produced fractions within communities that manifested in local debates about ideology, colonial legacies, and the spatialization of postcolonial power. This process appears particularly clearly in the aftermath of the Mau Mau uprising in Central Kenya, where rivalry between colonial loyalists and former anti-colonial insurgents persisted despite the postcolonial elite's homilies of reconciliation. This article focuses on the position of the “chief,” a local agent of the central state whose occupants had been at the vanguard of the colonial State of Emergency. In demanding that chiefs be elected after independence, radical nationalists and ex-fighters in the branches of the Kenya African National Union party sought to reshape for whom and how political power was to be exercised. Across the region, controversies erupted as some colonial chiefs stayed in place, outspoken radicals replaced others, and elsewhere, former Mau Mau became loyal servants of centralized power. This local lens reveals these fractures within local communities along the lines of class and power, rewriting a narrative of Kenyan postcolonial statehood that has so often emphasized ethnicity and the overweening power of the bureaucratic apparatus. Decolonization hereby appears as a continuously negotiated and incomplete process.
read.dukeupress.edu
September 1, 2025 at 2:16 PM
and an inheritor of the tradition of the Kikuyu Independent Schools Association. I explore attempts to resurrect the movement in the aftermath of Kenya's independence, in the context of efforts among political elites to reconcile post-Mau Mau grievances. Give it a read!
September 1, 2025 at 2:16 PM
It was a great pleasure to be part of this Special Edition on Decolonisation's Discontents, conceived at an excellent workshop in Boston in 2023. Do give @emleake.bsky.social's introduction and all the other contributions a read as well!
August 9, 2025 at 2:41 PM