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About the Author

Daniel R . Headrick is Professor of Social Science and History Emeritus at Roosevelt University. He is the author of numerous books, including The Tools of Empire: Technology and European Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century (OUP); The Invisible Weapon: Telecommunications and International show more Politics 1851-1945 (OUP); Technology: A World History (OUP); and Power over Peoples: Technology, Environments, and Western Imperialism, 1400 to the Present. show less

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4 reviews
As technology has increased the speed of communications over the past two centuries, so too has it increased its importance to governments. With knowledge being power, governments have sought to capitalize on the increasing rapidity and accessibility of communications, both for advancing their own control and to limit the power and influence of their adversaries. This is something that Daniel Headrick clearly demonstrates in this book, which examines the political aspects of the emergence of show more the global communications network in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Headrick begins by examining the emergence of the first technology to make rapid communication over long distances possible – the electric telegraph. While developing internal networks was relatively easy, communications over long distances was politically risky, as messages could be intercepted and disrupted on lines that crossed hostile territory. Security thus became an issue early in global communications, one that could only be guaranteed by submarine cables, which gave their owner direct contact with possessions half a world away. The leader in the effort to establish an international network was Great Britain; though most Western governments seized on telegraphy in the second half of the nineteenth century, only the British had capital markets large enough both to fund the often expensive projects and to absorb their often considerable loss.

By the start of the twentieth century, a rapid communications network spanned the globe, one that served as a tool of national power and security. Yet as Headrick notes, it also fueled international insecurity. He sees the quickening pace of communications as a factor in the growing international tensions that plagued the world in the first decade of the new century, as the speed of events overtook the ability of diplomats (who were used to a much more gradual course that gave them time in which to operate) to respond effectively. During the war, the British demonstrated the power granted by their control of the telegraph network, as they cut the Germans off from easy contact with other regions, especially America. This gave Britain a vital edge in shaping the interpretation of the conflict, one that helped swing the United States firmly into their camp.

Yet as vital an advantage communications control was, it was a reflection of British power at its zenith. Even before the start of the war, radio threatened to break the British monopoly on telegraphy. Moreover, by the end of the war the British faced a rival of even greater wealth: the United States, which used the new technology to erode Britain’s dominance in telecommunications. The adoption of shortwave in the 1920s ended British hegemony, while the Second World War saw the British bequeath their position as the dominant power in global communications to the United States, during a conflict in which communications played a decisive role in the Allied victory over the Axis powers.

If there is a complaint to be lodged against this generally excellent book, it is that while Headrick does a great job of explaining the impact of telecommunications during the world wars, he rarely demonstrates how telecommunications facilitated political control in peacetime. It would have been insightful to examine episodes from the early years of telecommunications revealed its power and how such examples altered views towards the burgeoning new technology. Yet this is a minor quibble. Well researched and clearly written, Headrick offers a great introduction to the development of the global telecommunications network in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and its role in international politics, one that should be read by anyone seeking to understand the role of technology in shaping political power.
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Meritorious, very global overview of the difficult relationship between man and nature from prehistory to the present, and even beyond. Daniel R. Headrick (Emeritus Professor of Social Science and History, Roosevelt University) sketches in just over 500 pages the interaction of man with his surrounding environment, in its various aspects, but with the emphasis on the negative impact of man. This is not a book that will make you happy, because Headrick spares us nothing: the mass extinction show more of large animal species by hunter-gatherers; deforestation, soil exhaustion, and the first large-scale epidemics in agricultural societies; the acceleration of human impact by the Industrial Revolution and its spread across the entire planet; and finally climate change and reduced biodiversity that threatens our survival. The chronological overview focuses mainly on economy, demography, urbanization, biological exchange, and so on. And is sometimes very factual. But my biggest issue is with the very committed tone of his final chapters, which focuses on climate and other challenges. More about that in my History account on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3332772535. show less
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