Timothy Parsons
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All askaris are family men
Sex, domesticity and discipline in the King’s African Rifles, 1902–1964
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Military planners have long recognized that soldiers' families can strongly influence discipline, morale and effectiveness. In British East Africa, where the coercive force of the King's African Rifles (KAR) underpinned colonial authority, the reliability of rank-and-file askaris was a serious concern. The KAR was so dependent on the domestic labour of women that African NCOs often hired women to care for young, unmarried askaris. Military prostitution raised the fear that sexual relations between non-African women and askaris would undermine the racial hierarchy of colonial society. The British authorities believed that long-term separation from their families caused askaris to seek the company of 'unsuitable' females, whom they considered to be sources of physical disease (usually venereal) and political subversion. Thus, while African females were unofficially regarded as little more than property by the KAR, in reality its family policies were a product of negotiation and accommodation.

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Guardians of empire

The armed forces of the colonial powers c. 1700–1964

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