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The Population Census of 1917 and its Relationship to Egypt's Three 19th Century Statistical Regimes

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  • Roger Owen

Abstract

This essay is a comparison of Egypt's three 19th century statistical regimes, with particular emphasis on the third established by the British before WW1, and culminating in the holding of the 1917 census. It is argued that the organizer of this census used it self-consciously to encourage the production of statistical data as an essential tool of modern government. He also provided officials with a method of integrating their findings through the use of a national model based on the balance between population and resources. Foucault's notion of governmentality is deployed to provide a framework within which to understand the central processes at work.

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  • Roger Owen, "undated". "The Population Census of 1917 and its Relationship to Egypt's Three 19th Century Statistical Regimes," Working Paper 47131, Harvard University OpenScholar.
  • Handle: RePEc:qsh:wpaper:47131
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    File URL: http://scholar.harvard.edu/ero/node/47131
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