Who is exploiting whom




















By choosing I Accept , you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies. Print Subscriptions. Deseret News homepage. Filed under: Opinion. Reddit Pocket Email Linkedin. Generally speaking, we all benefit when our neighbor becomes richer. He pays more taxes, thus improving our community and its services.

He builds a better house, hiring workers and purchasing raw materials. He deposits money in the bank, making money available for car loans and business investments. There are many kinds of relationships between filmmaker and subject, some resistant, some participant, some passive, but to categorize documentary filmmaking as a singular relationship, either innately exploitative or not, is a claim that Young and Todd are committed to refute. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news!

Sign up for our Email Newsletters here. This Article is related to: Features and tagged Interviews. Back to IndieWire. Documentaries and their Subjects Who is Exploiting Whom? Indiewire Sep 13, am. And most recently, he has signed an executive order that he suggests will curtail the H-1B visa program for high-skilled immigrants who largely come from developing nations like India and China. Melania Trump received one for her work as a model in Largely phrasing his requests as repayments of historical debts, Trump has argued that Mexico should pay for a border wall and briefly claimed that South Korea no longer a developing nation, to be sure must pay for a new missile defense system the United States already promised to install.

The Indian parliamentarian and former diplomat criticizes popular narratives of the British empire as, overall, a force for historical good in India, having endowed the country with its political unity, democracy, and the foundations for a modern economy. Perhaps the most influential scholarship on the subject has come from economists Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James A. Robinson, who have written extensively on the way in which the insufficient institutions imposed on some colonies, but not others, by various empires account for a substantial portion of the differences in economic development between them.

They argue, with significant empirical evidence, that while colonies like Canada and Australia, which were settled by Europeans, received institutions similar to those in Europe, nations in the global south, where very few Europeans settled permanently, were endowed with institutions oriented toward extraction rather than good governance.



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