Warning: ini_set(): A session is active. You cannot change the session module's ini settings at this time in /home/assailry/public_html/lib/pkp/classes/session/SessionManager.inc.php on line 69
Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/assailry/public_html/lib/pkp/classes/session/SessionManager.inc.php:69) in /home/assailry/public_html/plugins/generic/citationStyleLanguage/CitationStyleLanguagePlugin.inc.php on line 478
Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/assailry/public_html/lib/pkp/classes/session/SessionManager.inc.php:69) in /home/assailry/public_html/plugins/generic/citationStyleLanguage/CitationStyleLanguagePlugin.inc.php on line 479
TY - JOUR
AU - Anees-Ur- Rehman,
AU - Muhammad Rizwan,
PY - 2026/05/22
Y2 - 2026/07/07
TI - A Historical Analysis of Colonial Rule and Its Long-Term Effects on Socio-Cultural Development
JF - `
JA - ASSAJ
VL - 5
IS - 2
SE - Articles
DO -
UR - https://www.assajournal.com/index.php/36/article/view/1779
SP - 1185-1196
AB - <p><em>This study provides a historical analysis of colonial rule and its long-term effects on socio-cultural development. Colonialism reshaped political structures, education systems, economic organization, and cultural identities across colonized regions, leaving lasting impacts that continue to influence contemporary societies. The study examines how colonial governance policies altered indigenous cultural practices, social hierarchies, language systems, and identity formation. A qualitative historical research design is adopted, supported by secondary data analysis. The dataset includes colonial administrative records, historical archives, census reports, academic books, and peer-reviewed journal articles on post-colonial studies. Comparative historical analysis is used to evaluate changes across pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial periods. The study also applies thematic analysis to identify recurring patterns in cultural transformation, social restructuring, and institutional development. The findings indicate that colonial rule significantly disrupted indigenous socio-cultural systems by introducing foreign administrative structures, education models, and legal frameworks. While some modernization occurred, it often resulted in cultural displacement, identity fragmentation, and long-term socio-economic inequalities. However, hybrid cultural forms also emerged through cultural interaction and adaptation. Measurable outcomes include changes in literacy rates over time, linguistic shifts, transformation in social stratification patterns, and institutional continuity or disruption indices. The study concludes that colonial legacies continue to shape socio-cultural development, requiring critical reassessment to understand present-day inequalities and cultural dynamics.</em></p><p><strong><em>Keywords: </em></strong><em>Colonialism, Socio-Cultural Development, Post-Colonial Studies, Cultural Transformation, Historical Analysis, Identity, Institutional Change</em></p>
ER -