Spies and Informer on Campus: Vetting, Surveillance and Deportation of Expatriate University Lecturers in Colonial Zimbabwe, 1954-1963

Spies and Informer on Campus: Vetting, Surveillance and Deportation of Expatriate University Lecturers in Colonial Zimbabwe, 1954-1963

Author: 
Zimudzi, Tapiwa B.
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of Southern African Studies (JSAS)
Source: 
Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 33 - No. 1 - March 2007, pp. 193 - 208
Abstract: 

This article contributes to the historiography of state responses to the political activism of member sof the university community in colonial Zimbabwe by examining the role played by the Federal Intelligence and Security Bureau (FISB) in the security vetting, surveillance and deportation of expatriate lecturers of the University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland (UCRN). These lecturers were viewed as a security threat by the Federal government because of their actual or perceived support for communism and African nationalism in the Federation. The article argues that the application of these security measures violated a key component of the UCRN's academic freedom, the civil liberties of these lecturers, and was based on FISB's distroted and sometimes false secret intelkigence about their political opinions and activities.

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CITATION: Zimudzi, Tapiwa B.. Spies and Informer on Campus: Vetting, Surveillance and Deportation of Expatriate University Lecturers in Colonial Zimbabwe, 1954-1963 . : Taylor & Francis , . Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 33 - No. 1 - March 2007, pp. 193 - 208 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frspies-and-informer-campus-vetting-surveillance-and-deportation-expatriate-university-lecturers-3