Historian Ira Berlin has called members of these communities Atlantic Creoles because of their connections to different African and European social and political networks. British and French officials became more concerned with urban development during and after the war, especially in efforts to create a stable and docile urban workforce. Efforts by colonial governments to build closer ties between metro-pole and empire after 1945 also remade urban space. French development money paid for the construction of apartment complexes, canals, and port facilities at Abidjan, Libreville, and elsewhere. Strikes in Mombasa, Lagos, Dar es Salaam, and other cities between 1945 and 1950 led colonial municipal governments to push for more social benefits for African city residents. .
Social and Economic Changes.
Metropolitan regions display a stunning assorted qualities of features, economic structures, amounts of infrastructure, historic roots, patterns of development, and degrees of conventional planning. Yet, loads of the issues that they manage are strikingly familiar. For instance, as metropolitan territories develop, they develop to be progressively diverse. Numerous colonial residents in the city experience to a greater or even lesser extent coming from severe environmental well-being challenges of lack of clean water, inadequate sewerage facilities, & insufficient solid waste materials disposal. Two major reasons colonialism took place in Africa was because the Europeans thought that they were rich in resources and the Europeans wanted to take over those resources (EA). The economic goals of colonialism were simple: to provide maximum economic benefit to the colonizing power at the lowest possible price. As the effects of the Berlin Conference which establish the rules of the partition game became clear, those areas of Africa which had previously been developing significant trade and economies of their own were brought under the control of European economic policies.