imperialism 
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SOURCE: The Baffler
7/31/2020
Unnatural Disasters: On the Pandemics We Make For Ourselves
by Ann Neumann
Like cholera and poverty, Covid-19 is not the crisis; it’s a disease that feeds on our racialized inequalities.
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SOURCE: Responsible Statecraft
6/26/2020
What Defunding the Police can Mean for U.S. Foreign Policy
by Stuart Schrader
To start this process will require looking inward, but it will be impossible without looking outward as well — by rethinking the U.S. role in the world, shrinking the Department of Defense’s massive footprint, and redirecting its resources and legitimacy toward more peaceful streets.
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SOURCE: Boston Review
6/25/2020
Policing the World (Review)
by Andrew Lanham
Since World War II, the United States has spread its style of policing—and police technology—around the world as a way to exert control. This link between modern policing and the national security state means they will have to be democratized together.
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SOURCE: The Guardian
6/24/2020
Britain's Persistent Racism Cannot Simply Be Explained by its Imperial History
by David Edgerton
It played its part, but empire does not explain all of Britain’s record of elitism, exploitation and discrimination.
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SOURCE: The Conversation
6/8/2020
Using the Military to Quash Protests Can Erode Democracy – As Latin America Well Knows
by Kristina Mani
Even strong democracies have unraveled when the military was brought in to quell protest. Uruguay in the 1960s, Venezuela in the 1980s and Chile just last year provide insights.
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SOURCE: CNN
6/10/2020
Britain's Imperialist Monuments Face a Bitter Reckoning Amid Black Lives Matter Protests
After protestors took down a statue of slave trader Edward Colston this past Sunday and dumped it in the River Avon, many are reconsidering what should happen to statues of similar individuals, who profited from the suffering of so many.
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SOURCE: The Guardian
6/8/2020
Yes, American Police Act Like Occupying Armies. They Literally Studied Their Tactics
by Stuart Schrader
The founders of modern policing quelled foreign uprisings. ‘Demilitarizing’ police will be harder than taking away their tanks.
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SOURCE: The Conversation
5/18/2020
Venezuela Failed Raid: US Has a History of Using Mercenaries to Undermine Other Regimes
by Andrew Thomson
The arrest of Silvercorp mercenaries in Venezuela echoes a long history of the U.S. government supporting private troops to overthrow foreign governments.
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12/22/19
Brexit and the End of the United Kingdom
by Ed Simon
Because of Boris Johnson’s ascendancy, it must be considered that it is not only inevitable that there won’t be a United Kingdom again, but that it’s necessary that there shouldn’t be.
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SOURCE: Tom Dispatch
10/13/19
American Brexit
by Tom Engelhardt
It’s Not Just Britain Headed for the Subbasement of Imperial History.
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SOURCE: Quartz
9/23/19
Thomas Cook, the travel agency of Britain’s far-flung 19th-century empire, is dead
Thomas Cook was born with a railway journey that took place in 1841—the same year that Hong Kong was ceded to Britain, then at the peak of its imperial power.
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SOURCE: Tom Dispatch
9/19/19
Ending the Afghan War Won’t End the Killing
by Stephanie Savell
Since 2015, casualties from explosive remnants of war and abandoned IEDs have been rising rapidly.
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9/15/19
Expansion and Motivation: Frontiers and Borders in the Past and Present of the United States and Russia
by Robert W. Thurston
Greg Grandin's The End of the Myth, David McCullough's The Pioneers, and Angela Stent's Putin’s World push us to consider and compare the history of the frontier and borders.
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8/18/19
Book Review: Jeremy Black's Imperial Legacies
by Jeff Roquen
While Black lapses into a biased apologia and generalizes at the expense of factual evidence, Imperial Legacies, on the whole, delivers a long overdue re-contextualization of the British Empire.
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6/16/19
Why is Brazil so American?
by Marcos Sorrilha Pinheiro
Given Brazil's history, it is fully understandable that its current president, a retired military man from the Brazilian middle class, has a genuine admiration for Trump and his followers.
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5/5/19
Navassa Island: The U.S.’s 160-year Forgotten Tragedy
by Ken Lawrence
Both the U.S. and Haiti claim the island. Here's why its history matters.
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2/10/19
Book Review: Andrew Roberts, Churchill: Walking with Destiny (2018)
by Jeff Roquen
Although more than one thousand books have been written on his life, the recently-published Churchill: Walking with Destiny (2018) by Andrew Roberts merits consideration as the newly definitive one-volume biography of its subject.
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SOURCE: The Conversation
10-17-16
Britain is right to celebrate the abolition of slavery, but must acknowledge excesses of empire
by Alan Lester
Britain’s humanitarianism was part of the very fabric of imperial expansion – and reflected all its ambivalence.
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10-11-15
This Is How Europe Came to Dominate the World by the 20th Century
by Philip T. Hoffman
There’s a lesson in this we should keep in mind as we resist the onslaught of ISIS.
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10-18-15
The Wrong Way to Think About Imperial Empires
by Antoinette Burton
Empire’s rise and fall is a very seductive story. It’s way too simple.