Dr David Wilson
Senior Lecturer
History
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Prize And Awards
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Publications
- Towards an optimum yield : science, technology, and fisheries development in Lake Malawi, 1930-1964
- Wilson David, Gough Milo, Nkhoma Bryson, Chirwa Elias, Knapp Charles, Morse Tracy, Mulwafu Wapulumuka
- Isis Vol 117, pp. 3-26 (2026)
- https://doi.org/10.1086/739480
- Neglected by reason : piracy, colonial development, and conflicting ideas of ‘failure’ in the early eighteenth-century Bahamas
- Wilson David
- European Colonial Failures, c. 1560-1800 Early Modern Polities, Overseas Interests, and Empire Building (2026) (2026)
- "The net that catches the most fish" : fishing, innovation, and law in the Gold Coast Colony (Ghana), c. 1898–1923
- Wilson David
- The Journal of African History Vol 67 (2026)
- https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021853726100759
- The Law of the Sea
- Wilson David
- The Oxford Handbook of Law in Early Modern European Colonies (2025) (2025)
- Piracy and sovereignty in the Indian Ocean : The British East India Company's campaign against Atlantic and angrian Maritime predation, 1717-1724
- Wilson David
- Connecting the Seas Practices and Narratives of Early Modern Piracy (1550-1800) (2025) (2025)
- Colonialism, governance, and fisheries : perspectives from Lake Malawi
- Gough Milo, Nkhoma Bryson, Chirwa Elias, Wilson David, Knapp Charles, Morse Tracy, Mulwafu Wapulumuka
- The Journal of African History Vol 66 (2025)
- https://doi.org/10.1017/S002185372500012X
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Teaching
My teaching focuses on maritime activity, colonisation, and empire-building, particularly in the early modern period.
I currently teach the following classes -
- The ‘Westward Enterprise’: Piracy, Trade, and the Emergence of the British Atlantic Empire, 1500-1730 (Year 3 / Hons)
- Scotland and the Americas in the Seventeenth Century (Hons)
- Enemies of All Mankind? The Rise, Fall, and Enduring Legacy of Atlantic Piracy, 1660-1726 (Hons special subject)
- Plantations by Land and Sea, 1590-1720: British Imperial Projects in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, c. 1590-1720 (MSc/PG Diploma in Historical Studies)
- Palaeography (MSc/PG Diploma in Historical Studies)
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Research Interests
I am interested in any aspects of maritime, environmental, and legal histories of empire from the early modern to the late colonial period, including:
- Maritime law and jurisdiction
- Customary law, legal pluralism, and maritime activity
- Seafarers, coastal communities, and colonisation
- Piracy and privateering
- Fishing and fishing communities
- Histories of waterbodies (inc. oceans, lakes, and rivers)
- Atlantic and Indian Ocean history
- Caribbean history
- Trade and commercial networks
- Slavery and the slave trade
- Scotland and empire
- Imperial governance and authority
- Inter-imperial connections and conflict
Professional Activities
- Colonial Hinter-seas: A Conference on Subaquatic Resources and Waterside Lives from the Early Modern to the Contemporary
- Organiser
- 19/8/2026
- Charting the Currents of Knowledge, Technology, and Regulation in British Colonial Fisheries Development
- Speaker
- 14/7/2026
- Pirate Imperialism: A Round-Table Discussion with Prof Manuel Barcia
- Speaker
- 8/6/2026
- Fisheries, Imperialism, and Knowledge in the Twentieth Century
- Speaker
- 25/3/2026
- Fisheries Science and the British Colonial Fisheries Advisory Committee, 1943-1961
- Speaker
- 4/12/2025
- Colonialism, Climate Justice, and Blue Humanities
- Organiser
- 20/8/2025
Projects
- Colonial Currents, Contemporary Countercurrents: Historical Legacies and Collaborative Futures in Lake Malawi/Niassa/Nyasa's Transnational Fisheries
- Wilson, David (Principal Investigator) Knapp, Charles (Co-investigator)
- 27-Jan-2026 - 26-Jan-2028
- British Colonialism, Marine Sciences, and Fisheries Governance: Lessons from Lake Malawi in the Mid-Twentieth Century
- Wilson, David (Principal Investigator) Knapp, Charles (Co-investigator) Morse, Tracy (Co-investigator)
- 04-Jan-2022 - 03-Jan-2023
- One Ocean Hub - 2019-24
- Wilson, David (Principal Investigator)
- 01-Jan-2019 - 31-Jan-2024