Britain's Declining Empire: The Road to Decolonisation, 1918–1968
In: Comparative studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Band 29, Heft 3, S. 583-584
ISSN: 1548-226X
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In: Comparative studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Band 29, Heft 3, S. 583-584
ISSN: 1548-226X
"Historians typically regard the British Empire as a state project aided by corporations. Philip Stern turns this view on its head, arguing that corporations drove colonial expansion and governance, creating an overlap between sovereign and commercial power that continues to shape the relationship between nations and corporations to this day."
In: Journal of colonialism & colonial history, Band 21, Heft 2
ISSN: 1532-5768
In: Journal for early modern cultural studies: JEMCS ; official publication of the Group for Early Modern Cultural Studies, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 105-120
ISSN: 1553-3786
The English East India Company was first chartered in 1600, endured until the late nineteenth century, and, in a clever act of corporate resurrection, has even recently returned as a global, upmarket retail outlet selling fine foods and commemorative coins. It has also endured in the popular imagination and culture, churning out heroes and villains alike in film, television, and video games. The script writer for a forthcoming BBC miniseries, in which the East India Company stars as the prime antagonist, even noted recently that the Company was like "the CIA, the NSA, and the biggest, baddest multinational corporation on earth" wrapped into one corporation. All of this attention of late to one of the largest and most enduring corporations of its time, which managed a commercial and political system separated by half a world at upwards of a year and half's distance, is perhaps unsurprising given the great legal, political, and economic conundrums surrounding the modern multinational corporation, from questions about global management to controversial issues such as tax inversions, monopoly, state-owned corporations, as well as the corporate person's rights to free speech, religion, and so on. However, from outlandish film productions to the most sober of scholarship, the connections between the Company's past and our present seem to have become all things to all people, stretched almost to the point of breaking. Though it would be impossible to be exhaustive, this Article nonetheless seeks to outline the various ways in which the East India Company's legacy has been drawn upon in a range of fields, but especially legal and business scholarship, for a wide range of purposes. In so doing, it proposes that the sheer diversity of uses to which the Company's history has been put, as well as the lack of any agreement about the meaning and nature of such comparisons, might suggest that the lessons the East India Company can offer to the financial, commercial, and organizational history of the modern corporation, while ...
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In: Itinerario: international journal on the history of European expansion and global interaction, Band 39, Heft 3, S. 512-525
ISSN: 2041-2827
In: The Company-State, S. 185-206
In: The Company-State, S. 100-118
In: The Company-State, S. 61-82
In: The Company-State, S. 121-141