利比里亚的企业殖民主义

IF 1 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
C. Whyte
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1972年,Walter Rodney写道:“众所周知,利比里亚是美国的殖民地,除了名义上的殖民地。”。罗德尼引用了费尔斯通轮胎橡胶公司不断膨胀的利润作为证据。1940年至1965年间,这家总部位于俄亥俄州的轮胎制造商从利比里亚出口了价值1.6亿美元的橡胶,而利比里亚政府仅获得800万美元的收入。在1926年的特许协议授予该公司超过100万英亩的99年租约后,费尔斯通控制了利比里亚大片土地。费尔斯通天然橡胶公司仍然在利比里亚拥有世界上最大的橡胶种植园。值得注意的是,该公司还通过将1926年的协议与500万美元的政府贷款挂钩,确保了美国政府介入保护其利益,从而确保了其未来。因此,利比里亚政府的利益与费尔斯通的命运密不可分。Gregg Mitman在《橡胶帝国:费尔斯通在利比里亚争夺土地和权力》中追溯了这种美国“企业殖民主义”的起源和发展。正如作者所解释的,这本书是从利比里亚的角度来看的美国企业历史的一部分,而不是利比里亚本身的历史。与其他研究人员一样,米特曼一直无法访问费尔斯通档案,但他仔细调查了来自美国、英国和利比里亚的大量相关档案材料,以及所有相关的二级文献。采访材料加强了对种植园生活的描述,明智地使用照片也是如此。与其说是学术干预,不如说是叙事史,这本书对费尔斯通提出了强有力的指控,强调了其大规模土地掠夺的经济、法律和文化影响。副标题故意让人想起“争夺非洲”,欧洲列强将非洲大陆的大片领土划分为殖民地,只有利比里亚与其他殖民地不同。现代利比里亚国家的建立可以追溯到1820年美国殖民协会派遣到塞拉利昂的少数美国黑人定居者。第二年,该协会的代表在更南边购买了大约140英亩的土地。该定居点的灵感来自非洲黑人自决的希望,但也成为白人种族隔离主义者将自由和被奴役的黑人从美国流放的一种手段。1847年,定居者宣布脱离美国殖民协会独立,并将利比里亚建立为非洲共和国。独立使利比里亚资源匮乏,欧洲帝国之间的竞争不断威胁着它的生存。邻国英国和法国殖民政府要求利比里亚“发展”其
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Corporate Colonialism in Liberia
In 1972, Walter Rodney wrote, ‘It is common knowledge that Liberia was an American colony in everything but name’. As evidence, Rodney cited the ballooning profits of the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company. Between 1940 and 1965, the Ohio-based tyre manufacturer exported 160 million dollars’ worth of rubber from Liberia, while the Liberian government received only 8 million dollars in revenue. Firestone controlled huge swathes of Liberian land, following the 1926 concession agreement that granted the company a 99-year lease over one million acres. The Firestone Natural Rubber Company still owns the world’s largest rubber plantation in Liberia. Significantly, the company also secured its future by tying the 1926 agreement to a 5 million dollar government loan, ensuring the US government would step in to protect its interests. Thus, the interests of the Liberian government became inextricably linked to Firestone’s fortunes. Gregg Mitman traces the origins and development of this American ‘corporate colonialism’ in Empire of Rubber: Firestone’s Scramble for Land and Power in Liberia. As the author explains, the book is a slice of American corporate history viewed from the perspective of Liberia, rather than a history of Liberia itself. Mitman, like other researchers, has been unable to access the Firestone archive, but he has carefully surveyed a wide range of relevant archival material from the US, Britain, and Liberia, as well as all the relevant secondary literature. Interview material enhances the account of life on the plantations, as does judicious use of photographs. More narrative history than academic intervention, the book puts forward a strong case against Firestone, highlighting the economic, legal, and cultural impact of its massive land grab. The subtitle deliberately evokes the ‘Scramble for Africa’ that saw vast territories of the continent’s land divided up into colonies by European powers, only Liberia was famously unlike other colonies. The inception of the modern Liberian state can be traced to a small number of Black American settlers, despatched to Sierra Leone in 1820 by the American Colonisation Society. The next year, representatives of the society purchased around 140 acres of land further south. The settlement was inspired by hopes of Black self-determination in Africa, but also served as a means for white segregationists to exile free and manumitted Black people from the US. In 1847, the settlers declared their independence from the American Colonisation Society and established Liberia as an African republic. Independence left Liberia with few resources and competition between European empires constantly threatened its existence. Neighbouring British and French colonial governments demanded that Liberia ‘develop’ its
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
18.20%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: The Journal of African History publishes articles and book reviews ranging widely over the African past, from the late Stone Age to the present. In recent years increasing prominence has been given to economic, cultural and social history and several articles have explored themes which are also of growing interest to historians of other regions such as: gender roles, demography, health and hygiene, propaganda, legal ideology, labour histories, nationalism and resistance, environmental history, the construction of ethnicity, slavery and the slave trade, and photographs as historical sources. Contributions dealing with pre-colonial historical relationships between Africa and the African diaspora are especially welcome, as are historical approaches to the post-colonial period.
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