"Providing the best coverage of the wide-ranging imperialism that began in the 1850s, this book concentrates on early American imperialism in the Pacific and includes colourful. It describes how the racial legacy of early cases of imperialism led to modern denial of rights claims in U.S. Pacific territories"--
"Providing the best coverage of the wide-ranging imperialism that began in the 1850s, this book concentrates on early American imperialism in the Pacific and includes colourful. It describes how the racial legacy of early cases of imperialism led to modern denial of rights claims in U.S. Pacific territories"--
Miles M. Evers is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Connecticut, where he focuses on the intersection of international security and political economy. He has been published in the European Journal of International Relations, International Security, International Studies Quarterly, International Theory, and Perspectives on Politics.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. One man and no dog: an entrepreneurial theory of American Pacific imperialism 2. Birds and bases: American expansion under the Guano Act 3. Germans and coconuts: American Imperialism in Samoa 4. Sugar and paradise: American Imperialism in Hawaii 5. Slavers and gin runners: explaining Pacific non-expansion Conclusion.
Introduction 1. One man and no dog: an entrepreneurial theory of American Pacific imperialism 2. Birds and bases: American expansion under the Guano Act 3. Germans and coconuts: American Imperialism in Samoa 4. Sugar and paradise: American Imperialism in Hawaii 5. Slavers and gin runners: explaining Pacific non-expansion Conclusion.
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