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Published byGordon Allison Modified over 9 years ago
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Less Developed and Newly Industrializing Countries
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What’s In a Name? “Third World” Newly Industrializing Countries Less(er) Developed Countries More LDC’s than NIC’s
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How It All Began – Imperialism & Colonialism Empires Imperialism Colonialism Modern Imperialism – 1500’s
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Timeline – Modern Imperialism Part One 1494: Spain and Portugal partition the Americas 1519-1536: Aztecs and Incas defeated 1602-1652: Dutch establish control in Indonesia – English in North America 1810-1825: Wars for independence in Latin America, Spanish/Portuguese rule ends 1839-1858: UK expands control into Asia – “the jewel in the crown” and Hong Kong 1884: Berlin Conference or Europe carves up Africa into pieces
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Map of Africa – 1562
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Political and Social Institutions in Imperialism State imposed form of political organization Ethnic and national identities created where none existed before Gender roles – transferred from imperial power to colony Religion – tribal beliefs merge with global faiths
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Map of Africa - 1737
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Economic Institutions and Imperialism Traditional agricultural economies transformed Extractive economies Domestic development impeded as a result
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Karte von Afrika - 1888
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Timeline - Modern Imperialism Part Two 1939-1945: WWII catalyzes decolonialization Asia/Africa 1947: Independence for India 1956-1968: Independence for most British, French and Belgian colonies in Africa. Nigeria 1960! Woo Hoo! 1975: Independence for most former Portuguese colonies in Africa – Angola 1997: Hong Kong – control reverts back to Chinese – “one country, two systems”
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Map of Africa 2003
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Challenges to Building State Autonomy and Capacity Absence of professional bureaucracy Clientelism Rent Seeking Corruption Sovereignty compromised by external actors
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Challenges to Building a Unified Nation-State Arbitrary boundaries imposed by former colonial powers Ethnic and religious divisions exacerbated by economic inequalities – Rwanda - ethnonationalism
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Paths to Economic Growth Import substitution Export-oriented industrialization Structural adjustment Neo-colonialism
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Corruption – The Biggest Imperial Hangover Kleptocracy Prebendalism Nigeria 1970’s and 1980’s Nigeria 1990’s Nigeria’s “pharonic” system – only million stolen, not billions
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Corruption Index Map 2010 - Yellow is less corrupt, red is most corrupt Courtesy of Transparency International (transparency.org)
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Is There Any Hope? Building civil societies Non-Governmental Organizations Microcredit and microfinance Debt relief - $76 billion in 2010 Nigeria Trust Fund U2’s Bono and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill discuss third world debt relief while in Ghana, 2002.
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World Bank and International Monetary Fund Created at Bretton Woods Conference 1944 to stabilize world economy 185 member states – based in Washington DC US chooses head of World Bank, IMF chief picked by European Union IMF strength derived from “quota” or payment from member states – amount paid depends on wealth – determines voting strength Loans come with “strings attached” Minimal investment in Africa, less than 2%, half of which goes to Nigeria and Sudan
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