Tin and Global Capitalism, 1850-2000

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American Tin
bolivia
Bolivian Government
Bolivian State
Bolivian Tin
Business history
Category=JPS
Category=KCD
Category=KCP
Category=KJK
Category=KJM
Category=KNA
Category=KND
Ce Rs
colonial commodity trade
cornwall
Cost Book System
decolonization
decolonization studies
entrepreneurship
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eq_business-finance-law
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extractive metallurgy
foreign policy
global economic trade
Global resource management
global tin industry political economy
globalization
Gravel Pumpers
history of tin
industrial raw materials
International Tin
international tin agreement
International Tin Committee
Ita
Large Tin Mines
Malaya
Malayan Tin
MNR Government
natural resource management
Philipp Brothers
political economy
political history
Raw Material
raw materials
Raw Materials Diplomacy
resource geopolitics
scrap metal
state intervention economics
Sweet Corn
thailand
Tin Barons
tin cartels
tin consumption
tin deposits
Tin Industry
tin markets
tin mining
Tin Mining Companies
Tin Ores
Tin Producers
Tin Smelting
tin trade
war economy
World War

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415737050
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Sep 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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For most of the twentieth century tin was fundamental for both warfare and welfare. The importance of tin is most powerfully represented by the tin can - an invention which created a revolution in food preservation and helped feed both the armies of the great powers and the masses of the new urban society. The trouble with tin was that economically viable deposits of the metal could only be found in a few regions of the world, predominantly in the southern hemisphere, while the main centers of consumption were in the industrialized north. The tin trade was therefore a highly politically charged economy in which states and private enterprise competed and cooperated to assert control over deposits, smelters and markets.

Tin provides a particularly telling illustration of how the interactions of business and governments shape the evolution of the global economic trade; the tin industry has experienced extensive state intervention during times of war, encompasses intense competition and cartelization, and has seen industry centers both thrive and fail in the wake of decolonization. The history of the international tin industry reveals the complex interactions and interdependencies between local actors and international networks, decolonization and globalization, as well as government foreign policies and entrepreneurial tactics. By highlighting the global struggles for control and the constantly shifting economic, geographical and political constellations within one specific industry, this collection of essays brings the state back into business history, and the firm into the history of international relations.

Mats Ingulstad is Postdoctoral Fellow at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway, and co-founder of the History and Strategic Raw Materials Initiative (HSRMI).

Andrew Perchard is Lecturer at the University of Strathclyde Business School, UK, and co-founder of the HSRMI.

Espen Storli is Associate Professor at NTNU, Norway, and co-founder of HSRMI.