"Bissell has provided an interesting and informative book that links urban policy in Zanzibar to broader currents in urban planning. He provides a detailed analysis of colonial bureaucracy at work, highlighting the indeterminacy caused in part by the shuffling of personnel."—American Historical Review"This is a welcome and well-written addition to the growing academic literature on the planning history of African cities."—Planning Perrspectives"[Achieves] a valuable contribution to the study of political discourse, violence, and the organization of space and social relationships in Zanzibar. More generally . . . provide[s] interesting discussions of colonialism, power, identity politics and the ideology of modernization.Nov 2012"—Africa"Bissell's book . . . contributes significantly to our understanding of colonial power and its relationship to the planned and built environment."—Intl Journal of Middle East Studies"Bissell . . . has pored over a multitude of archival sources to construct a very thorough, well evidenced central argurment."—Journal of Historical Geography"Contributes to the growing body of work in African urban history and to the study of Zanzibar. . . . Bissell writes beautifully and makes very good use of his archival research."—Garth Myers, University of Kansas