Consented Imperialism
A critical term describing how pro‑Western political groups reframe Western imperialism and colonialism in non‑Western countries as “consented” and therefore not “real” imperialism. According to this logic, if a foreign power invades, occupies, or exploits a country while claiming to act in the interests of that country’s people—or if a local elite collaborates—the act is magically transformed from domination into partnership. Critics argue that “consented imperialism” is a rhetorical trick: the same people who say “imperialism is when you invade another country against its will” conveniently forget that label when the invader is a Western democracy. In practice, “consent” is often manufactured through puppet governments, economic coercion, or the sheer threat of worse alternatives.
Example: “He called NATO’s intervention ‘a request from the local government’—pure consented imperialism, pretending that a small group of collaborators speaks for a whole nation.”
Consented Colonialism
The colonial version of consented imperialism: the idea that colonialism can be legitimate if the colonised population (or its appointed representatives) supposedly “agreed” to it. Pro‑Western apologists use this to defend settler projects, resource extraction, or military bases by pointing to local elites who benefit from the arrangement. Critics note that “consent” obtained under threat of violence, economic strangulation, or cultural erasure is not consent at all. The term exposes the hypocrisy of those who condemn old‑fashioned colonialism while defending its modern equivalents under the banner of “partnership.”
Example: “She claimed the economic zone was ‘invited’ by the local chief—consented colonialism, ignoring that the chief was installed by the same foreign power and faced prison if he refused.”
Consented Colonialism
The colonial version of consented imperialism: the idea that colonialism can be legitimate if the colonised population (or its appointed representatives) supposedly “agreed” to it. Pro‑Western apologists use this to defend settler projects, resource extraction, or military bases by pointing to local elites who benefit from the arrangement. Critics note that “consent” obtained under threat of violence, economic strangulation, or cultural erasure is not consent at all. The term exposes the hypocrisy of those who condemn old‑fashioned colonialism while defending its modern equivalents under the banner of “partnership.”
Example: “She claimed the economic zone was ‘invited’ by the local chief—consented colonialism, ignoring that the chief was installed by the same foreign power and faced prison if he refused.”
Consented Imperialism by Abzugal May 2, 2026
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