Power competition and Exploitation in Southeast Asia

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Abstract

Understanding the economic and political dimensions of imperialism requires a careful theoretical reading and close empirical study of the historical phases involved. This paper critically examines the historically and contemporary implications of how Southeast Asia was incorporated into the world market. It traces how the rival colonial powers established exploitative mechanisms in order to extract surplus value from the region. US imperialism in the form of export of capital and production did not replace the European former colonial powers but became a supplement to Japanese, and in particular British economic imperialism, in the region. This contribution challenges the conventional wisdom that American economic imperialism and hegemony was benign and not based on the British and Japanese use of brute force and conquest. In contrast to this view this paper argues that American monopoly capital expansion should be viewed by its “essential one-ness” between economic, political, and military-strategic objectives/tendencies
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TitelOxford Handbook of Economic Imperialism
RedaktørerImmanuel Ness, Zak Cope
Antal sider18
UdgivelsesstedOxford
ForlagOxford University Press
Publikationsdato1 mar. 2022
Sider437-454
Kapitel24
ISBN (Trykt)9780197527085
ISBN (Elektronisk)9780197527115
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 1 mar. 2022
NavnOxford Handbooks

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