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Some scholars suggest that the directionality of the imperial boomerang needs to be re-evaluated. Political scientist Stuart Schrader argues for a colony-centered explanation to the boomerang effect, especially in the case of the United States where imperial and racial violence predates the heyday of the American empire. [16]
Sensenig & Brehm [7] applied Brehm's reactance theory [8] to explain the boomerang effect. They argued that when a person thinks that his freedom to support a position on attitude issue is eliminated, the psychological reactance will be aroused and then he consequently moves his attitudinal position in a way so as to restore the lost freedom.
Imperial boomerang in sociology and political science; Unintended consequences in general This page was last edited on 21 October 2020, at 13:02 (UTC). Text is ...
The theory of imperialism is the basis of most socialist theories of warfare and international relations, and is used to argue that international conflict and exploitation will only end with the revolutionary overthrow or gradual erosion of class systems and capitalist relations of production. [3]
"The Imperialism of Free Trade" is an academic article by John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson first published in The Economic History Review in 1953. [1] It argued that the New Imperialism could be best characterised as a continuation of a longer-term policy begun in the 1850s in which informal empire, based on the principles of free trade, was favoured over formal imperial control unless ...
Control theory (sociology) Correspondence principle (sociology) ... Imperial boomerang; Industrial society; Inglehart–Welzel cultural map of the world ...
Critical race theory (1 C, 54 P) D. Decolonization of Korea (4 C, 16 P) L. Postcolonial literature (4 C, 57 P) N. ... Imperial boomerang; K. Korean nationalist ...
The title "Year of tha Boomerang" is a reference to Sartre's quotation "it is the moment of the boomerang", referring to anti-colonial violence in the preface to Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth, and potentially, also in reference to Aimé Césaire's theory of the Imperial boomerang.