Associate Professor
Stokes Hall S351
Telephone: 617-552-3878
Email: priya.lal@bc.edu
Modern African history (with a focus on East Africa), decolonization and nationalism, development, African socialism, labor and education, neoliberalism
Priya Lal is a historian of Africa and the modern world. Her research examines听the politics of national听development and approaches to human听development in the twentieth century. Her second book,听, will be published by the University of Chicago Press in 2026. Focusing on the role of academic and medical professionals in leftist nation-building projects in Zambia and Tanzania, it听relates the forgotten history of debates about and experiences of high-level human investment from the 1960s era of African decolonization to the structural adjustment period of the 1990s. In doing so, it reveals the centrality of educated labor to postcolonial development and tells a new story of how neoliberalism displaced modernization and its socialist alternatives on a global stage. To complete this study, Lal was awarded an ACLS Fellowship and a Burkhardt Fellowship, both from the American Council of Learned Societies.
Lal's previous book,听African Socialism in Postcolonial Tanzania: Between the Village and the World听(Cambridge University Press, 2015), offered the first major historical account of听Tanzania's rural socialist experiment, the听ujamaa听villagization initiative of the 1960s and 70s, detailing how it was envisioned, implemented, and experienced by a variety of actors. It received an Honorable Mention for the African Studies Association's Bethwell Ogot Book Prize and was supported by a research fellowship from the Social Science Research Council.
Lal听is currently writing a book about a global outdoor education movement and听the end of empire, exploring changing ideas about the relationship between selfhood, society, and nature on four continents. In addition, she maintains an active interest in the clinical, conceptual, and political history of neurodiversity. At Boston College, she enjoys teaching about all of the aforementioned topics as well as the history of precolonial Africa and the African diaspora, and the global history of race.
听With Quinn Slobodian, Gary Gerstle, and Tehila Sasson.听Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 2026.
鈥淒ecolonization and the Gendered Politics of Developmental Labor in Southeastern Africa,鈥 in Stephen Macekura and Erez Manela, eds.,听The Development Century: A Global History,听173鈥196.听New York: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
"Tanzanian听Ujamaa听in a World of Peripheral Socialisms,鈥 in Martin Klimke, et al., eds.,听Routledge Handbook of the Global Sixties, 367鈥380. New York: Routledge, 2018. 听
鈥淰illagization and the Ambivalent Production of Rural Space in Tanzania,鈥 in Andrea Fischer-Tahir and Sophie Wagenhofer, eds.,听Disciplinary Spaces: Spatial Control, Forced Assimilation and Narratives of Progress since the 19th Century, 119鈥136. Berlin: Transcript Verlag, 2017.
听(Cambridge University Press, 2015).
鈥淎frican Socialism and the Limits of Global Familyhood: Tanzania and the New International Economic Order in Sub-Saharan Africa,鈥澨Humanity听6, 1 (2015) 17-31.
鈥淢aoism in Tanzania: Material Connections and Shared Imaginaries,鈥 in Alexander Cook, ed.,听Mao鈥檚 Little Red Book: A Global History, 96鈥116. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014.
鈥淪elf-Reliance and the State: The Multiple Meanings of Development in Early Post-Colonial Tanzania,鈥澨Africa: Journal of the International African Institute听82, 2 (2012)听212鈥234.听 听
鈥淢ilitants, Mothers, and the National Family:听Ujamaa, Gender, and Rural Development in Postcolonial Tanzania,鈥澨Journal of African History听51, 1 (2010)听1鈥20.