Imperialismustheorien und Geschichte: Eine empirische Annäherung
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Description
For decades, if not centuries, the term imperialism has been used in manifold and ambivalent ways. Some historians, such as William Hancock, therefore shied away from using it in their texts, while others set up theories to explain as much as possible with regard to the European expansion into the non-European world – and in some cases even beyond. Taking the three cases of German colonial policy before 1890, the granting of “responsible government” to the so-called British dominions and the expansion of British power in South Asia from the mid-eighteenth century to 1914, this article seeks to show to what extent a knowledge of both older and more recent theories of imperialism can still be useful for empirical research in the humanities and the social sciences.
Date of Publication
2014
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
de
Additional Credits
Series
Internationales Asienforum
Publisher
ABI, Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institut
ISSN
0020-9449
Access(Rights)
restricted