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POSTCOLONIALISM (ECONOMIC (RESOURCES (Mineral (The British knew the value…
POSTCOLONIALISM
ECONOMIC
RESOURCES
Land
Expanding the British lands so that they could get an advantage of war, more supplies, etc.
Mineral
The British knew the value of the minerals and metals that comes out of the ground so they built mines and made the slaves from that country to mine there .
The British took basically all the of the valuable metal and material that came form the underground
The British wanted to take a lot of things from India and Africa to make profit, so the British took live stock to sell and have so they can profit from them
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Industrial
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Thousands of cloth factories were built in India and Africa to make clothes for the rich and the poor. This, of course, benefited the British
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TRADE
The British wanted to trade things with other countries with the goods they stole from the Indians and the Africans.
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One of the main reasons the British wanted to take over India and Africa was because they wanted slaves and workers .
IDEOLOGICAL
Religion
The British were the first country that brought Christianity to India and Africa. But, the people of those countries were not able to chose whether they wanted to be a Christian or not. They were forced to.
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Power
The British wanted to show the rest of the world that they were a powerful nation so they invaded other countries like India and Africa to take land.
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Politics
The indians wanted freedom with out violence. while being invaded. They protested againt the british
Indians are claiming freedom. The want to protest against what was going on and try to stop it, because the thought it was wrong
During the protests, a lot of Indians went too far and ended up dying. That went against what they were protesting.
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When the British invaded the Indians the British had most of the political and economic power and they used this to restrict Indian-owned industries including cotton textiles.
Many of the British officials working in India were racist, impacting the political climate.
During the 1930s, the British slowly enacted legal changes and the Indian National Congress began to win many political victories. Among those campaigning for Indian nationalism was Gandhi, a civil rights leader who advocated non-violent civil disobedience.
British missionaries increased during the imperial era, with hopes to spread Western Christianity.
The actual timing of independence owed a great deal to World War Two and the demands it put on the British government and people.