, picture taken 1940
Benign colonialism Benign colonialism is a theory of colonialism in which benefits allegedly outweigh the negatives for indigenous populations whose lands, resources, rights and freedoms come under the control of a colonising nation-state. The historical source for the concept of benign colonialism resides with
John Stuart Mill (1806–1873), who served as chief examiner of the
British East India Company - dealing with British interests in
India - in the 1820s and 1830s. Mill's most well-known essays on benign colonialism appear in "Essays on some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy." Mill's view contrasted with Burkean orientalists. Mill promoted the training of a corps of bureaucrats indigenous to India who could adopt the modern liberal perspective and values of 19th-century Britain. Mill predicted this group's eventual governance of India would be based on British values and perspectives. Advocates of the concept of benign colonialism cite improved standards in health and education, in employment opportunities, in liberal markets, in the development of natural resources and in introduced governance. The first wave of benign colonialism lasted from c. 1790–1960, according to Mill's concept. The second wave included neocolonial policies exemplified in
Hong Kong, where unfettered expansion of the market created a new form of benign colonialism. Political interference and military intervention in independent nation-states, such as
Iraq, is also discussed under the rubric of benign colonialism in which a foreign power preempts national governance to protect a higher concept of freedom. The term is also used in the 21st century to refer to US, French and
Chinese market activities in African countries with massive quantities of underdeveloped nonrenewable
natural resources. These views have support from some academics.
Economic historian Niall Ferguson (born 1964) argues that
empires can be a good thing provided that they are "liberal empires". He cites the British Empire as being the only example of a "liberal empire" and argues that it maintained the rule of law, benign government,
free trade and, with the abolition of slavery, free labor. Historian Rudolf von Albertini agrees that, on balance, colonialism can be good. He argues that colonialism was a mechanism for modernisation in the colonies and imposed a peace by putting an end to tribal warfare. Historians L. H. Gann and Peter Duignan have also argued that Africa probably benefited from colonialism on balance. Although it had its faults, colonialism was probably "one of the most efficacious engines for cultural diffusion in world history". The economic historian
David Kenneth Fieldhouse has taken a kind of middle position, arguing that the effects of colonialism were actually limited and their main weakness was not in deliberate
underdevelopment but in what it failed to do. Niall Ferguson agrees with his last point, arguing that colonialism's main weaknesses were sins of omission. However, history records few cases where two or more peoples have met and mingled without generating some sort of friction. The clearest cases of "benign" colonialism occur where the target exploited land is minimally populated (as with
Iceland in the 9th century) or completely
terra nullius (such as the
Falkland Islands).
Generative Empires According to the
Marxist and
Hispanicist intellectual,
Gustavo Bueno, a common error in the Historiography of Imperialism would have been the tendency of historians to see all Western Colonial Empires as an homogeneous phenomena based on purely economical exploitation (mostly on
Historical materialist approaches based in
Leninist conception of Imperialism) or on cultural, ethnic and religious supremacy (mostly on supporters of
Decoloniality's approaches) that only led to
Generalization, and then to
Reductionism due to such bad
Apriorism. According to Bueno, Western Empires, like all
Empires on
Human history, were multifacetic and sometimes those could be actually beneficial to the subjugated peoples for multiple reasons (sometimes based on moral principles on "imperial ideology", like the practise of
Consociationalism to secure a
Common good, although also can be only due to purely pragmatic and
amoral needs of
Political stability), although he still recognise the existence of Empires that perjudicated the locals to benefit themselves (usually being intentionally
caused, but also can be
accidentally). In such way, and based in
Dialectical materialism (as also the classical definition of Empire in
Medieval philosophy instead of
Lenin's one), he defines two generalities, instead of a singular generality, to categorize the Western Colonialism (and Imperialism in general) in the movement of History, based also in the distinction that
Ginés de Sepúlveda proposed in his time between "
Imperios heriles" and "
Imperios civiles", which would be these: • ,
Legal code of the
Spanish Empire to seizure the
Human rights (
Derecho Indiano) of the subjugated
Indigenous peoples and
Mestizo people, guaranting their
social integration to the
Western civilisation instead of their exclusion or on inferior conditions to the Europeans
Generative Empires: Empires that actually were "Generator of Civilisations" for having
social structures that, without avoiding unavoidable operations of colonialist exploitation, determine the social, economic, cultural and political development of colonized societies, making possible their transformation into fully-fledged political societies. In these category he classificate the
Spanish Empire (considered the epitome of this beneficial type of Imperialism in
Modern era due to the organic developing of the
Hispanidad and
Laws of the Indies that has been beneficial to
Indigenous peoples to match the development of the
Old World),
Portuguese Empire,
Macedonian empire,
Roman Empire,
Persian empires (specially
Achemenid Persia with
Cyrus the Great as the epitome of this type of Imperialism on
Classical Age),
Soviet Union,
United States, etc. •
Depredative Empires: Empires that actually "Depredate Civilisations" for having social structures that tend to keep colonized societies coordinated in relations of exploitation in the use of their economic or social resources such that they prevent the political development of these societies, keeping them in a state of underdevelopment and, in the worst case, destroying them as such. In these category he classificate the
British Empire (considered the epitome of these type of Imperialism in
Modern era, due to intentionally aspiring to destroy "uncivilised societies" like the
Redskin on
North America, or to prevent the full development of colonizated so as not to lose economic supremacy, like the
British East India Company),
Dutch Empire,
Nazi Germany, Achemenid Persia (specifically with
Darius the Great), etc. Despite this classification, Bueno also argues that some Western Empires can alternate between being Generative to then be Depredative, and vice versa, caused due to a "Natural Dialect" of the primacy of the Material necessities (like
Geopolitical economy) instead of the Ideological basis (like
Ethics). Using for example the
American Imperialism or
Soviet Imperialism during
Cold War, in which, according to him, sometimes those
De facto Empires beneficiated dominated societies by both promoting national liberation movements, alike guaranting human rights and democracy (so being Generative Empire), but still maintaining predatory practices to secure Domination (so being Depredative Empire). He argues that only rare cases has maintained a consistency of being mostly Generative (like
Spanish Empire) or mostly Depredative (like
British Empire), which he considers is related to the
Modernization theory in which the Western Colonial Empires that were more based on
Mercantilism,
Secularism,
Modern state,
Enlightened absolutism (during
Classical imperialism),
Legal positivism and
Capitalist economies, or post-capitalist in the case of
Soviet Union (during
New Imperialism and Current
Neocolonialism) has a tendency to be Depredative, while the Empires based on
Medieval Corporatism,
Confessionalism,
Composite state,
Traditional Monarchy,
Iusnaturalism and
Feudal economies has a tendency to be Generative (but at the cost to be
less effective on their economics and being behind in
rationalization of their institutions, and so, against the "
Dialectical logic of history"). This also would explain why Protestant Societies through their
work ethic were more
progressivist than Catholic societies (and so why their Colonial Empires were host of
Industrial Revolution and dominated the
First globalization, which also caused the Historiographical error to see all Empires according to the "Anglo-Dutch depredative standard" while mocking the Iberian generative but retrograde model through the
Black legend) and also explaining the
Decline of Spain caused by its isolation from the
Political modernization, and brought to
Spanish Americans as a non-intended but necessary accidental colonial legacy. This last conclusion of Iberian Imperialism being generative "at the cost to be retrograde" has been criticised by
Traditionalist Hispanicist that blamed Bueno of being biased by Marxist
Historical determinism and
Hegelian historicism that is "modernist fundamentalism" (considering it a legacy of the
Whig history and
Positivist-
Rationalist historiography), considering instead that the
Decline of Spain (and Catholic
Christendoom) in the late
Ancien régime was due to the application of such Modernization theories instead of their resistance from Catholic Empires, causing alienation to the commoners (from both the
Metropoli and the
Oversea Domains) due to attack their Local Institutions and Forms of Life (like the
Fueros on
Spaniards, and
Usos y costumbres in
Spanish Americans) to empower the
Bourgeoisie class by allying themselves with the oligarchic
Landowners (not the
Commoners) in a
Centralisated and Homogenizated modern state, after
Bourbon Reforms and
Cortes of Cádiz reforms (both based in
Enlightenment philosophy), that resulted in an Empire that was less effective to supply or even to understand the economical necessities of Heterogeneous peoples with Heterogeneous necessities, so causing the
Spanish American wars of independence (and also
Carlist Wars) as a
Reactionary series of popular protests that were usurped by
Spanish Liberals and
Creole nationalist to consolidate a
Bourgeoisie democracy without any actual Economical Progress, and also sharing Bourgeioisie the power with Feudal Landowners until
Dictatorship of Primo de Rivera on
Spain, while in Spanish America never consolidating the Bourgeioisie due to still existing a "Criollo Oligarchy" inherited from such alliances with Feudal Landowners (not caused by a Retrograde colonial legacy, but as a Modernist development that wasn't possible to exist, in the way they are consolidated on Modern Republics of
Latin America, on the Pre-Revolution corporative social structures of the Traditional Monarchy that were defended by
Royalists in the spirit of
Laws of the Indies' protection to the
serfs, a similar goal to the populist
Vendean counter-revolutionaries against the
French Revolution). Similar criticism, although without supporting the Royalist American or Carlist Spaniard reactionary causes, has been done by
Left-wing Hispanicists who considers the Spanish American Wars of Independence as flawed Civil Wars that have been very romantized by Anti-Colonialist and Liberal historiography, but not being actually authentic National and Progressive Revolutions to stablish authentic
Capitalism and
Constitutionalism (being an "accident of history" that coincided with the
Age of Revolution, giving them an aesthetical appearance of progressivist, when in reality were actually
Criollo elitist political projects, while the Spanish Empire tried to adecuate the colonizated peoples to the
Political modernization through the
Cadiz Constitution). == See also ==