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Dr David Wilson
Senior Lecturer
History
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Prize And Awards
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Publications
- Fishing (in) the past to inform the future : lessons from Lake Malawi and Mbenji Island
- Wilson David, Chirwa Elias, Nkhoma Bryson, Gough Milo, Knapp Charles W, Morse Tracy, Mulwafu Wapulumuka
- Marine Policy Vol 173 (2025)
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2025.106589
- Gendering ocean management for sustainable ocean care in Ghana
- Oduro Georgina Yaa, Boswell Rosabelle, Wilson David, Ansah John Windie
- Sustainability Vol 16 (2024)
- https://doi.org/10.3390/su16198722
- Reflections on the past, present, and potential futures of knowledge hierarchies in ocean biodiversity governance research
- Niner Holly J, Wilson David, Hoareau Kelly, Strand Mia, Whittingham Jennifer, McGarry Dylan, Erinosho Bolanle, Ibrahim Sulley, Tshiningayamwe Sirkka, Febrica Senia, Lancaster Alana Malinde S N, Prokic Milica
- Frontiers in Marine Science Vol 11 (2024)
- https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2024.1347494
- The Problem of Piracy in the Early Modern World : Maritime Predation, Empire, and the Construction of Authority at Sea
- Coakley John, Kwan C Nathan, Wilson David
- (2024)
- Book review: Raiders and Natives: Cross-Cultural Relations in the Age of Buccaneers, by Arne Bialuschewski
- Wilson David
- New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids Vol 98, pp. 145-146 (2024)
- https://doi.org/10.1163/22134360-09801007
- Attaining fisheries sustainability : lessons from a traditional fisheries management scheme at Mbenji Island, Lake Malawi
- Chirwa Elias, Knapp Charles, Wilson David, Nkhoma Bryson, Mulwafu Wapulumuka, Morse Tracy, Gough Milo
- African Journal of Rural Development Vol 8, pp. 30-42 (2023)
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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
- Inexhaustible Seas: Fisheries Management in Scotland and the British Empire
- Speaker
- 19/11/2024
- 'Blackbeard's Reign of Terror', Empire Podcast / Goalhanger
- Interviewee
- 22/10/2024
- 'Blackbeard & the Pirates of the Caribbean', Empire Podcast / Goalhanger
- Interviewee
- 17/10/2024
- Talk like a Pirate Day 2024 / The Scotsman
- Interviewee
- 19/9/2024
- The Net That Catches the Most Fish: Colonialism, Law, and Fisheries Governance in Ghana and Malawi
- Speaker
- 22/8/2024
- Fisheries Science and the British Colonial Fisheries Advisory Committee, 1943-1961
- Speaker
- 21/8/2024
Projects
- 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-Jul-2023