About This Book
The author argues that twentieth-century world politics revolve around relations among the primary human races, and offers a global survey of demographic, geographic, and political forces changing those relations. He catalogs regions dominated by Asian, African, and indigenous American peoples and examines their population growth, migrations, and anti-colonial ferment. He traces the rise and solidarity of European-descended powers, analyzes how war, migration, and political fragmentation have weakened that dominance, and forecasts potential consequences for control of territory. The final section outlines defensive social and policy measures described as outer and inner dikes intended to preserve existing dominance, and the book mixes historical narrative with biological, geographic arguments, maps, and contemporary commentary.
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