Imperialism

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    Malaysia

    Why did Britain Imperialize Malaysia?
    British Malaya - Wikipedia
    To streamline the administration of the Malay states, and especially to protect and further develop the lucrative trade in tin-mining and rubber, Britain sought to consolidate and centralise control by federating the four contiguous states of Selangor, Perak, Negeri Sembilan and Pahang into a new entity, the Federated ...
  • Australia

    British imperialism exported a vast amount of capital to its colonies in Australia which was invested largely in land, banking, insurance and other finance institutions. Some British capital was invested in industry. But until World War I there was not a great development of industry in Australia.
  • china imperialism

    the First Opium War ends with British victory and Hong Kong's colonization. 1850 to 1864: the Taiping Rebellion devastates China. 1856 to 1860: the Second Opium War ends with British and French victory.
  • Vietnam

    The Vietnam War has its roots in European imperialism because the French brought Vietnam into its empire in the 1800s. Vietnam was (and still is) a small a poor nation, meaning they were unable to prevent the French from conquering their nation.
  • mexico

    Mexico was forced to pay for its own stolen land and to keep ties to its imperialist oppressors in the process; Cárdenas and the Mexican state, without a strong national bourgeoisie to fill the vacuum left by foreign capital, became the arbitrator between foreign capitalists and the militant workers' movement
  • austria

    mperialism adversely affected the colonies. Under foreign rule, native culture and industry were destroyed. Imported goods wiped out local craft industries. By using colonies as sources of raw materials and markets for manufactured goods, colonial powers held back the colonies from developing industries.
  • new Zealand

    New Zealand as a nation state was born imperial with the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi. The Treaty established a partnership between Māori, the indigenous people, and the British Crown. The Treaty underpins all aspects of modern New Zealand.
  • India imperialism

    The British restricted Indian industries, such as textiles. An emphasis on cash crops resulted in the loss of self-sufficiency for many villagers. The conversion to cash crops reduced food production, which caused famines.
  • congo

    The people of the Congo were forced to labor for valued resources, including rubber and ivory, to personally enrich Leopold. Estimates vary, but about half the Congolese population died from punishment and malnutrition. Many more suffered from disease and torture.
  • Kenya

    that's when imperialism started in Kenya. The British owned Kenya as a colony and slowly started enforcing laws that Kenya had never experienced before. The imperialism that took place in Kenya had a massive effect on the economy, political parties, and culture.
  • philippians

    When the U.S. occuped the Philippines in 1898, Filipinos controlled most of the archipelago and massively resisted the imposition of a new colonial ruler. The U.S. refused to recognize Filipino independence and sent 125,000 troops (two-thirds of the U.S. army) to impose their authority.
  • Indonesia

    During the long period of colonial rule, the Indonesian economy fell more completely under the control of the -- the Dutch, and for a brief period the British -- than almost any other territory.
  • Sudan

    The British colonial policy in Sudan developed unsustainable power structures between the North and the South, and between ethnic groups in the South. The result of this mismanagement, underdevelopment, and neglect was the Northern dominance and hegemony within the independent Sudanese government.
  • egypt imperialism

    The loss of culture, westernisation, continued low level of education and absence of a health care system display the negative impacts imperialism had on Egypt during the early twentieth century
  • cuba

    Military interventions of different scales loomed, with US troops entering Cuban territory in 1906 to 1909, 1912, 1917 and 1923. These conditions generated political and social protest in Cuba, fostered by social grievances and growing awareness of the centrality of US imperialism in the country's situation