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Neo - Colonialism

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Title: Neo - Colonialism


1
Neo - Colonialism
  • New Forms of Old Control

2
What is it?
  • "As long as imperialism exists it will, by
    definition, exert its domination over other
    countries. Today that domination is called
    neo-colonialism."
  • Che Guevara, Marxist revolutionary, 1965

3
Origins
  • The idea corresponds with the growth of
    globalisation.
  • After World War Two, the major European countries
    could no longer go back to the way it was.
  • They were weakened politically, economically, and
    militarily
  • In this relaxed state, many colonies developed
    nationalist / independence movements

4
  • Starts in the
  • Mid 1950s.
  • Accelerates in
  • the 1960s

5
How Economic Imperialism Works
  • Powerful economic states maintain a continuing
    presence in the economies of former colonies,
    especially where it concerns raw materials.
  • Stronger nations are charged with interfering in
    the governance and economics of weaker nations to
    maintain the flow of such material, at prices and
    under conditions which unfairly benefit
    developed nations and trans-national
    corporations.
  • Most multinational companies will sell their
    expertese in developing the resource, and in
    return keep a of the profit.

6
But what was there Before???
  • Before the Second World War, the world was much
    smaller in the sense that there were m any fewer
    nations then today.
  • Europeans, and to a lesser extent the Americans,
    dominated the world through direct and indirect
    control of Asia, Africa, and Central and South
    America.
  • This system of control was good old fashioned
    Imperialism.

7
Imperialism
  • Getting What You Need

8
Colonialism Kickin it Old School
  • When Europeans first travelled the globe they saw
    the need to exploit the territories they claimed.
  • The territories were controlled and colonised.
    Europeans sought to replicate their culture and
    society around the world.
  • American Colonies.
  • From 1600 to 1850, this was the preferred style
    of development.
  • In this period the major colonisers were
    British, French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Dutch.
  • During the 1700s, wars fought in Europe were
    transposed into these colonies. Namely, the
    British waged war on their enemies colonies to
    economically cripple them. It was immensely
    successful!
  • By the first quarter of the nineteenth century,
    Britain was the dominate colonial power.

9
What Changed in a Century
10
An Uneasy Feeling
  • The success of the British in creating a huge
    colonial system also coincided with more powerful
    forced Victorianism Morality and Liberalism.
  • They did not always work together, but instead
    helped created a distorted sense of right and
    wrong and sense of equity.
  • They did not want to take over the territory, but
    would stay for a little while.
  • Imperialism The economic, political control of a
    nation / region through indirect control.

11
The Break
  • The shift away from colonialism to imperialism
    was not a gradual process. For the British, it
    was the Indian Mutiny of 1857.
  • The British had defeated the rival French and
    Dutch colonies in India by 1757 (War of Austrian
    Succession) and consolidated power through the
    East India Company.
  • The Company, like the Hudsons Bay Company,
    existed on a Royal Charter to trade in the name
    of the British Monarchy. They were not subject to
    local, or even most British laws.
  • The Company set up its own administration, its
    own offices, recruited people to immigrate and
    built its own army.
  • In 1857, units from the Indian Army led a violent
    and bloody rebellion against the British

12
Outcome
  • The British brutally suppressed the rebels and
    re-imposed order.
  • Queen Victoria blamed the older system of
    colonialism and advocated a direct transfer of
    power over to the British Government.
  • The British did not take direct control, or try
    to impose British culture on the Indians.
  • They looked for local rulers and western trained
    administrators to run the show while they held
    power through the head of the government
    (Governor) and the military. The local people
    were free as long as the British Government let
    them.
  • Nigeria pop 20 mil, 400 white administrators
  • Sudan pop 9 mil, 140 white administrators
  • Looking at this shift the French also adopted the
    same approach. They did not need to send people
    to settle, they only had to control the
    mechanisms of power.

13
The Scramble for Africa
  • The shift marks a renewed interest in Africa.
  • Before 1850, it was mainly colonised along the
    coast, not the interior.
  • The British needed to maintain a chain of coaling
    stations from Europe to India
  • Starting in the 1870s, the European powers had
    internalised the idea that a great nation
    needed foreign territory.
  • The reason was namely trade.
  • The industrialisation of Europe meant that there
    was an increased need for raw resources to be
    sent back to Europe and a market to dump all
    their finished goods.

14
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15
Legacy
  • In their effort to create an empire the Europeans
    redrew the map of Europe.
  • When the Scramble for Africa was over, 10,000
    identifiable ethnic, religious and cultural
    groups had been pushed into 40 states or
    protectorates.
  • Rwanda, Congo, Sudan, South Africa
  • As part of their power struggle, pieces of Africa
    were traded around by the Europeans
  • National boundaries were straight lines drawn on
    a map, disregarding terrain or ethnicity.
  • Long time enemies are together Uganda, Chad,
    Sudan, Nigeria
  • Groups divided arbitrarily Congo, Somaliland

16
India
  • Was controlled by Great Britain - the jewel in
    the Crown from 1750s 1940s
  • To rule the local population, the British
    developed a political elite administration.
  • By the early 1900s these people coalesced into
    the Indian National Congress
  • The INC increasingly played a key role in
    decolonization and the end of empire.
  • The actual drive to independence was led by
    Mohandas K. Gandhi
  • He became a leader of the movement after World
    War One with a focus on passive resistance (civil
    disobedience)
  • By the end of the Second World War the political
    leader of the INC, Jawaharlal Nehru, led the
    actual negotiations for independence
  • Clement Attlee and the Labour Party wished to
    phase its presence out, but other crisis and
    Indian pressure caused them to pull the union
    flag down in India in 1947
  • Before they left the British tried to solve a
    major dilemma.
  • They divided India into two nations India
    (Hindu) and Pakistan (Muslim)

17
Ghandi
18
China
  • Europeans sought to develop trade relations with
    China as far back as the 1500s
  • The Chinese kept them in check, restricted trade
    and access.
  • In the Anglo - Chinese Wars (1839 to 1842 and
    1856 to 1860)
  • British force China to trade with them and allow
    them to set up their own unrestricted trade
    centres (Hong Kong)

19
  • In the early 1900s the Empress tried to use the
    Boxers to attack and drive out the Europeans, and
    by now the Americans.
  • It backfired and led to increased pressure to
    modernise.
  • In 1911, nationalist forces push the emperor off
    his throne and declare a republic under Sun Yat
    Sen

20
  • Starting the late 1920s the Communist forces led
    by Mao Zedong put pressure on the Nationalist
    forces led by Chang kai-shek
  • Mao took over China in 1949
  • He immediately severed any external influences

21
Arab Nationalism
  • Arab nationalism was originally a loosely united
    group opposed to colonialism and subsequently to
    migration of Jews to Palestine
  • As part of the Versailles Treaty, the British
    agreed to uphold the Balfour Declaration in 1917
  • The British hoped to weaken the Ottomans by
    pledging support for the creation of Jewish
    national home in Palestine
  • After the Second World War, the British could no
    longer contain the influx of European Jews.
  • Great Britain announced its withdrawal from
    Palestine in 1948.
  • This angered and emboldened regional groups to
    attack the colonists. The Soviet Union was
    especially willing to help.
  • Egypt in the 1950s

22
New Ties to Bind
  • With direct control lost
  • Critics of Globilisation argue that the IMF and
    World Bank are promoting a new version of
    control.
  • Often referred to as Economic Imperialism
  • Instead of direct military-political control,
    neocolonialist powers employ financial, and trade
    policies to dominate less powerful countries.
    This amounts to a de facto control over less
    powerful nations
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