01533nam a2200181Ia 4500001001100000005001700011008004100028020003300069050002000102090001000122245009900132260005400231300003200285505098000317650002201297650001701319999001501336000002286620251012174646.0 720315s1972 miua b 001 0 eng a0472168304a0472081705 (pbk)00aHC51b.B65 197200a330.910aEconomic imperialism;ba book of readings.cEdited by Kenneth E. Boulding and Tapan Mukerjee.  aAnn Arbor,bUniversity of Michigan Pressc[1972]  axviii, 338 pbillusc24 cm.0 aIntroduction, by K. E. Boulding.--The economic taproot of imperialism, by J. A. Hobson.--Dynamics of imperialism, by P. T. Moon.--On imperialism, by J. A. Schumpeter.--The concept of economic imperialism, by R. Koebner.--Imperialism: an historiographi cal revision, by D. K. Fieldhouse.--The nature of economic imperialism, by D. S. Landes.--Economic imperialism revisited, by M. Blaug.--Notes on the theory of imperialism, by P. A. Baran and P. M. Sweezy.--The effects of British imperial policy, by R. P. Thomas.--Theory of economic drain: impact of British rule on the Indian economy, 1840-1900, by T. Mukerjee.--Rising demands and insufficient resources, by H. and M. Sprout.--War as an investment: the strange case of Japan, by K. E. Boulding and A. H. Gleason.--Russian imperialism today, by T. P. Whitney.--The mechanism of neo-imperialism, by T. Balogh.--Burdens and benefits of empire: American style, by M. Bronfenbrenner.--Bibliography, by T. Mukerjee (p. 311-327) 0aEconomic history. 0aImperialism. c8249d8249