Harvests beneath Occupation
United Fruit Company influence during Central America military interventions and export economies
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- 24,99 €
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- 24,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
Bananas reshaped governments long before modern corporations openly influenced foreign policy. Across Central America, commercial contracts became instruments of military pressure, and fruit exports dictated the survival of entire republics.
Ports, railways, and customs houses were reorganized around the demands of foreign investors tied to the United States. During the Banana Wars, private interests aligned with naval deployments, diplomatic recognition, and debt restructuring to secure uninterrupted control over agricultural trade. Through declassified US government archives, corporate financial records, and diplomatic treaties, this book traces how the United Fruit Company and allied firms transformed Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and neighboring states into economies dependent on a single export system. Rather than focusing only on battlefield chronology, the narrative follows legal concessions, labor suppression, transport monopolies, and political patronage networks that shaped twentieth-century Latin America. The story reveals how corporate governance operated beside official state authority and how local elites negotiated power within unequal economic arrangements.
The consequences extended far beyond plantations and shipping routes. Banana republic politics altered regional sovereignty, influenced Cold War alignments, and established patterns of foreign intervention still visible across modern global trade systems.