front 1 International | back 1 affecting or something to do with 2 or more nations (war, trade, travel) |
front 2 occupy | back 2 to take control of a place |
front 3 acquire | back 3 to get or buy something |
front 4 exploit | back 4 to selfishly take advantage of someone in order to profit from them or otherwise benefit oneself. |
front 5 suppress | back 5 to stop by force, put down |
front 6 indigenous | back 6 native to a certain area |
front 7 strife | back 7 bitter disagreement; fighting, struggle |
front 8 unified | back 8 brought together or combined as a whole |
front 9 restoration | back 9 the action of returning something to a former owner, place, or condition. |
front 10 raw materials | back 10 the basic material from which a product is made. |
front 11 colonization | back 11 One country taking over another area to be used for their benefit |
front 12 imperialism | back 12 A policy in which a strong nation seeks to dominate other countries politically, socially, and economically. |
front 13 Direct Rule | back 13 a central authority makes all of the laws for another country, state or province. No decisions are left to the people under direct rule. |
front 14 Indirect rule | back 14 allows some of the local people (citizens) under appointment to make
decisions regarding the law. |
front 15 empire | back 15 A group of states or territories controlled by one ruler |
front 16 Social Darwinism | back 16 The application of ideas about evolution and "survival of the fittest" to human societies - particularly as a justification for their imperialist expansion. |
front 17 White Man's Burden | back 17 idea that many white colonizers from European countries had a duty to spread their religion and culture to those less civilized. |
front 18 jingoism | back 18 extreme patriotism, especially in the form of aggressive or warlike foreign policy. |
front 19 Rudyard Kipling | back 19 British writer who wrote of "the white man's burden" and justified imperialism |