marc-william palen
The Imperialism of Economic Nationalism, 1890–1913* The Open Door Policy was America’s version of the liberal policy of informal empire or free trade imperialism. —William A. Williams, Tragedy of American Diplomacy, 1959.1 The open door does not mean and should not mean free trade. —Benjamin B. Wallace, U.S. Tariff Commission, 1924.2
* The author is grateful to Daniel Headrick, Rachel Herrmann, Wm. Roger Louis, Stephen Meardon, Frank Ninkovich, Rob Rakove, Emily Rosenberg, J. A. Thompson, Adam Tooze, and Ian Tyrrell, as well as the attendees at Monash’s 2012 Inter-University U.S. Studies Conference, Yale’s 2013 International Security Studies Colloquium, and Exeter’s Early Career Seminar for their insights, comments, and criticisms. 1. William Appleman Williams, The Tragedy of American Diplomacy (New York, 1972 [1959]), 97, 55–56. 2. Benjamin B. Wallace, “Preferential Tariffs and the Open Door,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 112 (March 1924): 213. 3. John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson, “The Imperialism of Free Trade,” Economic History Review 6 (August 1953): 1–15; Robinson, “Imperial Theory and the Question of Imperialism after Empire,” in Perspectives on Imperialism and Decolonization, eds. Robert F. Holland and Gowher Rizvi (London, 1984), 48. 4. See especially Wm. Roger Louis, ed., Imperialism: The Robinson and Gallagher Controversy (New York, 1976). Diplomatic History, Vol. 39, No. 1 (2015). ß The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com. doi:10.1093/dh/dht135 Advance Access publication on February 7, 2014 157
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In 1953, John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson put forth a tantalizing thesis that revolutionized imperial studies. In their article “The Imperialism of Free Trade,” they suggested that the so-called New Imperialism of the 1870s was not new at all, but actually demonstrated a striking imperial continuity. The authors argued that England’s adoption of free trade from around 1850 onward had helped promote an informal British Empire that historians had previously overlooked. Thereafter, Robinson elaborated further upon the free-trade dimensions of informal imperialism: that it entailed “coercion or diplomacy exerted for purposes of imposing free trading conditions on a weaker society against its will.”3 Gallagher and Robinson’s unorthodox free-trade imperial conclusions have since sparked decades of controversy and scholarship—including within U.S. imperial history.4 Revisionist historians, most notably the so-called Wisconsin School, have adopted “the imperialism of free trade” thesis within