Soft power and corporate imperialism: maintaining British influence - Laboratoire Langages, Littératures, Sociétés, Études Transfrontalières et Internationales
Article Dans Une Revue Race and Class Année : 2016

Soft power and corporate imperialism: maintaining British influence

Résumé

It is often suggested that Britain has lost its great power status since the fall of Empire. Yet, whilst its military and economic power has undoubtedly been weakened, it continues to exert power and influence and to promote national interests via the exercise of both hard and soft power. Far from representing a novel strategy, this simultaneous deployment of both forms of power may be considered as a continuation of the dual imperial strategy of gunboat diplomacy and winning hearts and minds at home and abroad. Yet, the postcolonial era does represent some novelty: as was clear under the Conservative-led coalition and is now evident under a Conservative majority government, soft power is no longer exercised principally via cultural diplomacy, through, for example, the British Council, but increasingly via large companies which promote British economic and political interests through corporate imperialism.
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halshs-04735857 , version 1 (14-10-2024)

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Emma Bell. Soft power and corporate imperialism: maintaining British influence. Race and Class, 2016, 57 (4), pp.75-86. ⟨10.1177/0306396815624865⟩. ⟨halshs-04735857⟩
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