All Thinkers

Walter Rodney

Walter Rodney (1942-1980) was a Guyanese historian, political thinker, and activist. He was born in Georgetown, Guyana, then a British colony in South America, and showed exceptional academic ability from childhood. He studied history at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica and then completed a doctorate at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. He taught at universities in Tanzania and Jamaica and became one of the most important historians of Africa and the African diaspora of his generation. He is best known for his book How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, published in 1972, which showed systematically how African countries were made poor through centuries of colonial exploitation, not left poor through a lack of development. He was deeply committed to organising alongside working people and poor communities, not only writing about them. He was banned from Jamaica in 1968 for his political activities. He returned to Guyana in 1974 to work for political change there and was assassinated in 1980 at the age of thirty-eight. He died just months before elections that might have changed Guyanese politics.

Origin
Guyana, Caribbean / South America
Lifespan
1942-1980
Era
20th century
Subjects
African History Political Economy Colonialism Development Theory Pan Africanism
Why They Matter

Rodney matters because he provided one of the clearest and most systematic answers to a question that is still urgently relevant: why are African countries poor? The common answers, poor governance, cultural factors, lack of resources, all locate the cause of African poverty inside Africa.

Rodney turned this around

He showed, through careful historical analysis, that African countries are poor because of what was done to them from outside: five centuries of slave trade and colonial rule that extracted enormous wealth from Africa while deliberately destroying African industries, trade networks, and political institutions.

Africa did not fail to develop

It was underdeveloped, made poor by a process that enriched Europe at Africa's expense. This argument is not only historical: it speaks directly to questions of global inequality, reparations, and justice that are alive today. Rodney also matters as a model of the organic intellectual: a scholar who worked alongside and for ordinary people, not only in universities.

Key Ideas
1
Underdevelopment is something done to countries, not a natural state
The standard story about global inequality is that some countries developed and others did not, as if development were a race that some ran and others missed. Rodney challenged this story directly. He argued that underdevelopment is not a natural or original state: it is something that happens to countries through specific historical processes. African countries were not always poor relative to Europe. Before the slave trade and colonialism, many African societies were economically active, with sophisticated agriculture, trade networks, crafts, and political institutions. What happened after was not that they failed to develop but that they were actively underdeveloped.
2
The slave trade destroyed African development
Rodney showed that the transatlantic slave trade, which removed tens of millions of African people from the continent over three centuries, did enormous damage to African societies. The people taken were mostly young and productive: the farmers, craftspeople, and warriors who would have driven economic and social development. The regions most affected by the slave trade were left with reduced populations, disrupted agriculture, weakened political institutions, and constant violent conflict as communities raided each other to capture people to sell. This damage made African societies much weaker and more vulnerable to the colonial conquest that followed.
3
Colonialism extracted wealth from Africa for Europe
When European powers colonised Africa in the late nineteenth century, they organised African economies to produce raw materials for European industry: cotton, rubber, minerals, and cash crops. Africans provided the labour, often through forced work. The wealth produced went to Europe. At the same time, colonial policies destroyed African industries that might have competed with European ones. African textiles, metalwork, and other crafts were undercut by cheap European imports. By the time colonialism ended, African economies had been restructured to be dependent on European markets and European capital rather than developing their own integrated economies.
Key Quotations
"African development is possible only on the basis of a radical break with the international capitalist system, which has been the principal agency of underdevelopment of Africa over the last five centuries."
— How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, 1972
Rodney is stating his central argument about what genuine African development would require. Small improvements within the existing global economic system, he argues, will not be enough because that system was built through and continues to depend on the extraction of value from Africa. Genuine development requires changing the fundamental economic relationships between Africa and the rest of the world. This is a radical argument, and it was why Rodney was seen as a threat by both colonial and neocolonial governments.
"The question of who, and what, is responsible for African underdevelopment can be answered at two levels. First, the answer is that the operation of the imperialist system bears major responsibility. Second, one has to look at the internal problems of Africa."
— How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, 1972
Rodney is being careful here not to make a one-sided argument. He insists that external forces, the operation of imperialism and the international economic system, bear major responsibility for African poverty. But he also acknowledges that internal factors matter: the choices made by African governments and elites after independence, the persistence of social divisions, and the failure of some African states to govern in the interests of their people. A complete analysis requires both external and internal perspectives, even if Rodney believed the external was primary.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Systems Thinking When introducing how global economic inequality developed
How to introduce
Ask: why do you think some countries are much richer than others? After hearing ideas, introduce the two main stories: either rich countries developed through their own effort and skill, or rich countries became rich partly through exploiting other countries. Introduce Rodney's argument: it is not that Africa failed to develop, it was underdeveloped through specific historical processes. Ask: what difference does it make which story is true? What does each story imply about what should be done about global inequality today?
Critical Thinking When examining different explanations for poverty
How to introduce
Present several common explanations for why some African countries are poor: bad governance, cultural factors, lack of natural resources, tropical climate, lack of education. Ask: what evidence would you look for to test each explanation? Then introduce Rodney's explanation: these countries are poor because of what was done to them from outside over centuries. Ask: how could you test this historical explanation? What evidence would support it or challenge it? What does it mean for policy if Rodney is right?
Further Reading

How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (1972, Bogle-L'Ouverture Publications) is the primary text and is more readable than its academic reputation suggests. The introduction and first two chapters set out the main argument accessibly. For a biographical introduction: Jesse Benjamin and Robin D.G. Kelley's introduction to the 2018 edition (Verso) is the most thorough recent account of Rodney's life and continuing relevance. The Walter Rodney Foundation website maintains accessible resources about his work.

Key Ideas
1
Development and underdevelopment are two sides of one process
Rodney's most fundamental argument is that the development of Europe and the underdevelopment of Africa were not separate processes but two sides of the same process. Europe became rich partly because Africa was made poor. The profits of the slave trade funded European industrial development. The raw materials extracted from African colonies fuelled European factories. The markets in Africa and other colonies allowed European industries to expand. You cannot understand why Europe is rich without understanding the role of colonial exploitation. You cannot understand why Africa is poor without understanding how that exploitation worked.
2
Colonial education was designed to serve colonial interests
Rodney was a sharp critic of colonial education. He argued that the schools built by colonial powers in Africa were not designed to develop Africans' potential or to serve African societies. They were designed to produce the clerks, administrators, and middle managers that the colonial system needed, and to teach Africans to see themselves and their history through European eyes. Colonial education produced what Ngugi calls the colonisation of the mind: people trained to see their own cultures as inferior and to value European knowledge and ways of life above their own. True development, Rodney argued, requires a completely different kind of education.
3
Class and race in colonial and postcolonial societies
Rodney analysed the relationship between race and class in colonial and postcolonial societies. He argued that colonialism created racial hierarchies that also had economic content: white colonisers were the ruling class, Black Africans were the exploited workers. After independence, these racial hierarchies were sometimes replaced by new class hierarchies in which a small African elite, trained in colonial schools and connected to international capital, continued to extract wealth from poor Africans in ways that reproduced colonial patterns. This analysis connects to Ngugi's concept of neocolonialism and to Gramsci's analysis of how ruling classes maintain power after political change.
Key Quotations
"Every African who genuinely seeks to understand the roots of his or her condition must come to terms with the history of how the continent was exploited."
— How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, 1972
Rodney is making an argument about the relationship between historical knowledge and political understanding. You cannot understand why Africa is poor today without understanding how it was made poor. This historical understanding is not just academic: it is politically necessary. It prevents African people from accepting false explanations of their poverty, such as cultural inferiority or lack of capability. It directs attention to the real causes: the slave trade, colonialism, and the continuing structures of global economic inequality that were built through these processes.
"The peasants and workers of Africa need to know that their poverty is not due to the backwardness of Africa, but is a product of the historical robbery by European capitalism."
— How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, 1972
Rodney is making the same point Freire and Ambedkar make about internalised oppression: people who believe their poverty is their own fault, a result of their backwardness or inferiority, are much less likely to challenge the systems that actually produce that poverty. Knowledge of the real historical causes of poverty is a form of liberation: it replaces shame and self-blame with understanding and the basis for action. This is why Rodney saw his historical work as directly political and why his educational work in poor communities was inseparable from his academic writing.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Citizenship When discussing reparations and historical justice
How to introduce
Introduce the reparations debate: some argue that the descendants of colonised and enslaved peoples are owed compensation for the wealth extracted from their ancestors. Apply Rodney's analysis: if African poverty today is partly a consequence of colonial extraction, does that create obligations for the countries that benefited? Ask: what form might this take? Who would pay and who would receive? What evidence would you need to establish the connection between past exploitation and present inequality?
Financial Literacy When examining how global trade and finance work
How to introduce
Introduce the concept of terms of trade: the relationship between the prices of what a country exports and what it imports. Ask: what happens to a country that mainly exports raw materials and imports manufactured goods if raw material prices fall and manufactured goods prices rise? Connect to Rodney: he argued that the colonial economy was structured to keep African countries in exactly this position, producing raw materials for low prices and dependent on expensive imports. Ask: to what extent does this structure still exist today?
Critical Literacy When examining how history is written and for whom
How to introduce
Ask: in your school history curriculum, whose story is told? Introduce Rodney's argument that colonial education taught Africans to see their history through European eyes, treating Africa as a place without history before Europeans arrived. Ask: how does it change your understanding of the world if you learn African history from the perspective of African people and their experiences, rather than from the perspective of European explorers and colonisers? What histories are missing from your curriculum? Why?
Further Reading

For Rodney's historical context

CLR James's The Black Jacobins (1938, Secker and Warburg), which influenced Rodney, is the classic account of the Haitian Revolution and remains one of the most important works of Caribbean history. Ndongo Samba Sylla's The Fair Trade Scandal (2014, Pluto Press) provides a contemporary analysis of how unfair trade structures continue to disadvantage African countries.

For the dependency theory context

Andre Gunder Frank's Capitalism and Underdevelopment in Latin America (1967) develops a parallel argument for Latin America.

Key Ideas
1
Pan-Africanism and international solidarity
Rodney was a Pan-Africanist: he believed that African people across the continent and the diaspora shared a common history of oppression and a common interest in liberation, and that solidarity across national and cultural boundaries was essential for genuine African development. He was influenced by the earlier Pan-African thinkers including W.E.B. Du Bois and CLR James, and he extended their analysis by connecting Pan-Africanism to a broader analysis of global capitalism and imperialism. He argued that genuine African development required not only political independence but a fundamental change in the economic relationships between Africa and the rest of the world.
2
The intellectual must work with and for the people
Rodney lived his political philosophy. He did not only write about working people: he organised alongside them. In Jamaica, in Tanzania, and in Guyana, he held public education sessions in poor communities, spoke in markets and on street corners, and built political organisations grounded in the everyday experience of ordinary people. He was deeply influenced by Gramsci's concept of the organic intellectual: someone who emerges from and remains accountable to the community they work with. He believed that intellectual work that remained only in universities was incomplete and that genuine liberation required the active participation of the people themselves.
3
Ongoing relevance: global inequality today
Rodney's analysis of how global inequality was created remains directly relevant to understanding the world today. The economic structures he described, in which African and other developing countries export raw materials and import manufactured goods, pay debt to international financial institutions, and depend on foreign capital, are still largely in place. Debates about debt relief, fair trade, reparations for colonialism and slavery, and the terms of international economic agreements all connect to the historical analysis Rodney provided. His work gives historical depth to contemporary arguments about global economic justice.
Key Quotations
"In the final analysis, the guns and bullets used to kill Africans in the colonial period were produced by industries developed through African labour."
— How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, 1972
Rodney is making a deeply uncomfortable historical point about the circularity of colonial exploitation. The industrial capacity that Europe used to conquer and control Africa was itself built partly on the profits of the slave trade and colonial extraction. The weapons used to enforce colonial rule were manufactured in factories funded by colonial profits. The exploitation of Africa thus contributed to the tools of its own exploitation. This is not a conspiracy theory: it is a description of how economic systems work, in which advantages compound over time.
"The most profound contribution that intellectuals can make is to help liberate minds by presenting the truth of the historical record."
— Various lectures
Rodney is stating his understanding of what intellectual work is for. The role of the intellectual, particularly the historian, is not to produce knowledge for its own sake or for the benefit of other academics. It is to help people understand their situation accurately, which is the first step towards changing it. This connects directly to Freire's argument about critical consciousness and to Gramsci's concept of the organic intellectual. Rodney saw his historical work as a tool of liberation, and he backed this up by taking his work directly to working people rather than only publishing in academic journals.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When discussing the relationship between historical knowledge and identity
How to introduce
Connect to Rodney's argument that African people need historical knowledge to understand their situation accurately. Ask: does knowing the history of how Africa was exploited change how African students feel about themselves and their communities? Does it change how non-African students feel about their own countries' history? Connect to Césaire's argument about reclaiming history as a political act and to Ngugi's argument about the colonisation of the mind.
Global Studies When examining contemporary global economic inequality
How to introduce
Apply Rodney's historical analysis to the present. Ask: do the economic structures he described, in which African countries export raw materials and depend on foreign capital and international debt, still exist? What evidence do students find? Introduce current debates about debt relief, trade agreements, tax havens, and the terms of international financial assistance. Ask: what would a genuinely just global economic order look like, given Rodney's historical analysis of how the current order was built?
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Rodney argued that Africa was not responsible for any of its own problems.

What to teach instead

Rodney explicitly acknowledged that internal factors, including the decisions of African governments and elites after independence, contributed to ongoing problems. His argument was that external exploitation through the slave trade, colonialism, and the continuing structures of global capitalism was the primary and foundational cause of underdevelopment, but he never said it was the only cause. He was critical of African leaders who collaborated with international capital at the expense of their own people, which is the opposite of absolving Africa of all responsibility.

Common misconception

Rodney's analysis is outdated because colonialism ended decades ago.

What to teach instead

Rodney argued that formal colonial rule ended but the economic structures built through colonialism continued. African countries still mostly export raw materials and import manufactured goods. International debt keeps many African governments dependent on conditions set by international financial institutions based in Washington. Tax havens allow multinational companies to extract profits from African countries without paying taxes there. These continuing structures, which Rodney called neocolonialism, are why his historical analysis remains relevant to understanding contemporary global inequality.

Common misconception

Africa was completely undeveloped before European contact.

What to teach instead

Rodney's entire book is a refutation of this idea. He shows in detail that pre-colonial Africa had sophisticated political institutions, complex trade networks, advanced agriculture, skilled craft production, and rich cultural and intellectual traditions. The Mali Empire, the Kingdom of Benin, Great Zimbabwe, and many other African states were comparable in sophistication to contemporary European states. The idea that Africa had no history or development before Europeans is itself a product of colonial ideology, used to justify conquest by claiming there was nothing worth preserving.

Common misconception

Rodney was simply an ideologist who ignored historical evidence.

What to teach instead

How Europe Underdeveloped Africa is a work of careful historical scholarship based on extensive research across primary and secondary sources. Rodney had a doctorate from one of the world's leading universities and was recognised by historians across the political spectrum as a serious and rigorous scholar. He had strong political commitments, which he was open about, but these did not prevent him from engaging with evidence carefully. The book has been debated, criticised, and revised by later historians, as serious works of scholarship should be, but it remains a foundational text in the field.

Intellectual Connections
In Dialogue With
Frantz Fanon
Fanon and Rodney are two of the most important thinkers in the tradition of anti-colonial thought. Fanon focused on the psychology of colonialism and the conditions of genuine liberation. Rodney focused on the political economy of colonialism and underdevelopment. Both argued that genuine liberation required a fundamental transformation of the economic and political structures of colonialism, not only formal independence. Both also died young: Fanon at 36, Rodney at 38.
In Dialogue With
Aimé Césaire
Césaire's Discourse on Colonialism and Rodney's How Europe Underdeveloped Africa make complementary arguments from different angles. Césaire makes the argument philosophically, culturally, and poetically: colonialism is destruction, not civilisation, and it brutalises the coloniser too. Rodney makes the argument historically and economically: colonialism extracted specific wealth, destroyed specific industries, and created the specific economic structures that produce African poverty. Together they provide a comprehensive analysis of what colonialism was and what it did.
In Dialogue With
Antonio Gramsci
Rodney was influenced by Gramsci's analysis of how dominant classes maintain power through cultural and economic structures as well as through force. He applied Gramsci's framework to the colonial and postcolonial context: colonialism maintained itself not only through military force but through economic dependency, cultural destruction, and the education of an African elite that reproduced colonial values and served colonial economic interests. Rodney was also an organic intellectual in Gramsci's sense: he took his intellectual work directly to working people.
Complements
Amartya Sen
Rodney and Sen approach the same fundamental question from different directions: why are some countries poor? Sen provides the framework for measuring the capabilities that poverty denies people. Rodney provides the historical analysis of how that poverty was created. Sen's capabilities approach tells us what has been lost through underdevelopment. Rodney's analysis tells us how it was lost and who benefited. Together they provide both a diagnosis of global inequality and a historical account of its origins.
In Dialogue With
Cheikh Anta Diop
Both Rodney and Diop were engaged in the project of recovering and documenting African history as a foundation for African development and identity. Diop focused on ancient African civilisation and its contributions to world knowledge. Rodney focused on the more recent history of how African development was interrupted and reversed by the slave trade and colonialism. Both argued that accurate historical knowledge is politically necessary for African people and that the denial of African history is itself a form of colonial ideology.
In Dialogue With
Paulo Freire
Both Rodney and Freire believed that intellectual work must be connected to and accountable to the people it serves, not enclosed in universities. Both held public education sessions in poor communities. Both argued that understanding the real causes of poverty and oppression is the first step towards changing it. Freire called this developing critical consciousness. Rodney called it knowing the truth of the historical record. Both saw education as fundamentally political and liberation as requiring both knowledge and organisation.
Further Reading

For critical engagement with Rodney

The collection Walter Rodney Speaks (1990, Africa World Press) gives a sense of his political thinking beyond the academic work.

For contemporary development of his arguments

Ndongo Samba Sylla and others working in the tradition of African political economy continue to develop and update Rodney's analysis. Patricia Daley's edited collection Africa's Long Road to Decolonisation (2019) places Rodney's work in the context of ongoing debates about African development.