Książka Removing The Exploiters Ryan K. Robinson

Removing The Exploiters

Imagining a World Without Power Abuses: A persistent global structure in which Black populations have repeatedly been positioned as extractable, exploitable, or disposable within changing imperial systems, and this pattern.

Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Zapowiedź
Wydanie 09. 06. 2026
75.38
The book argues that modern global inequality is not accidental or the result of isolated historical...

Informacje o książce

Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
50
EAN
9798199753623
Enbook ID
52816956
Waga
82
Wymiary
152 x 229 x 3

Pełny opis

The book argues that modern global inequality is not accidental or the result of isolated historical events, but the outcome of a long-running, evolving system of power rooted in colonialism, slavery, financial control, and political intervention. It presents world history as a connected structure rather than separate national stories.

It begins by describing pre-colonial civilizations in Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Europe to challenge the idea that Europe was uniquely responsible for "civilization." It then traces European colonial expansion as a system of economic extraction, focusing on slavery, resource exploitation, and the destruction or subordination of non-European societies.

The book continues by arguing that after formal colonialism ended, global control shifted into financial and institutional forms. It highlights systems such as:

  • The Bretton Woods system and the rise of the U.S. dollar as global reserve currency
  • The IMF and World Bank and their structural adjustment policies
  • Debt systems and sanctions as tools of economic pressure
  • Military and covert interventions against leaders who pursued national resource control

A recurring theme is that leaders in the Global South who attempted to assert economic independence or nationalize resources were often removed, destabilized, or overthrown, which the book interprets as part of a consistent enforcement pattern within global power structures.

The book also argues that control operates not only through force but through culture, media, education, and ideology-what people are taught to see as "normal" global order. It describes Western media dominance, education systems, and cultural exports as reinforcing this structure by shaping global perceptions and aspirations.

In its later chapters, the book shifts to the present and future, focusing on artificial intelligence, global finance, and technology as the next phase of power concentration. It warns that these systems may deepen existing inequalities unless alternative economic and political models are developed.

Finally, it argues that global inequality is maintained by interconnected systems of extraction and influence rather than isolated historical injustices, and calls for greater awareness, alternative institutions, debt restructuring, and new forms of global organization.