North King
blech
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2004
- Messages
- 18,165
I was thinking more about socio-economic structure, especially in the southern parts of the country. Those seem rather more relevant to decolonisation than the ecology.
Heh. Point taken as regards your thought process. However, ecology is extremely important in the colonization of an area -- possibly more so than the actual socioeconomic or political structures involved. Bold statement, yes, but I will stand by it. In decolonization, it is probably considerably less important, though still somewhat -- certain ecological events inextricably tie colony nations to colonizers, forcing dependence.