"Colonial Meltdown is a must read for scholars and students interested in Northern Nigeria, the Depression, taxation, and the colonial state.…In very accessible prose, supported by meticulous research, (Ochonu) argues convincingly that the collapsing produce prices and dwindling profits of the Great Depression created a distinctive moment in the history of colonial exploitation in Northern Nigeria…." (Journal of African History) "(Colonial Meltdown) presents a persuasive argument that the paralysis of the colonial authorities in the face of unprecedented devastation in Northern Nigerian villages and communities resulted in the undermining of colonial paternalism." (The American Historical Review) "Colonial Meltdown presents an informative, well-argued and largely persuasive historical narrative that invites further, comparative investigation of the impact of the great depression on colonial economies, as well as offering a detailed case study which Nigeria scholars will find particularly valuable for its focus on a relatively understudied area." (Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History) "This book is well researched, elegantly written, and bound to reshape the debate on British imperialism in Africa." (author of Work and Control in a Peasant Economy) "Ochonu argues eloquently that the Depression was a period of manifest colonial failure which saw the withdrawal of many rural Nigerians from the global economy." (The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History) "Altogether, (Colonial Meltdown) is a solid historical analysis with deep insight into the contradictions of the colonial enterprise in nonemirate colonial Northern Nigeria. More important, it provides important signposts for understanding some of the structural antecedents to Nigeria's problematic postcolonial developmental state." (African Studies Review) "While previous African historians such as Fred Cooper have revealed the integral efforts of African workers' resistance during the interwar period, as part and parcel of the decline of the colonial era, Ochonu shifts the timeline to argue that scholars may need to look earlier to the Depression years to seek the catalysts of later anti-colonial struggles." (Alpata: A Journal of History) "Ochonu has written a widely ranging and richly detailed history of how colonial officials and Northern Nigerians responded to the economic and political challenges posed by the Great Depression." (International Journal of African Historical Studies)