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Greed and Guns: Imperial Origins of the Developing World

Part of the Elements in the Politics of Development series
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This Element studies the causes and the consequences of modern imperialism.

The focus is on British and US imperialism in the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries respectively.

The dynamics of both formal and informal empires are analyzed.

The argument is that imperialism is moved mainly by the desire of major powers to enhance their national economic prosperity.

They do so by undermining sovereignty in peripheral countries and establishing open economic access.

The impact on the countries of the periphery tends to be negative.

In a world of states, then, national sovereignty is an economic asset.

Since imperialism seeks to limit the exercise of sovereign power by subject people, there tends to be an inverse relationship between imperialism and development: the less control a state has over its own affairs, the less likely it is that the people of that state will experience economic progress.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009199781 / 9781009199780
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
02/11/2022
United Kingdom
English
75 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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