Colonial control is the political and economic dominance a colonial power exerts over a territory and its people, imposing foreign governance, economic systems, and cultural practices. In AP World, it's the pressure that colonial subjects pushed back against in the revolutions of 1750-1900 (Topic 5.2).
Colonial control means a foreign power runs the show in someone else's territory. The colonizer makes the political decisions, structures the economy to benefit itself, and often pushes its own language, religion, and customs onto the colonized population. Think of France governing Saint-Domingue or Britain claiming sovereignty over Māori land in New Zealand. The people who actually live there have little or no say.
In AP World, this term matters most in Topic 5.2 (Nationalism and Revolutions from 1750-1900) because colonial control is the thing revolutions reacted against. The CED's essential knowledge is blunt about it: discontent with monarchist and imperial rule pushed colonial subjects toward new ideologies like democracy and 19th-century liberalism, and toward a new sense of commonality based on shared language, religion, customs, and territory. In other words, colonial control didn't just oppress people. It accidentally manufactured the national identities that would eventually overthrow it.
Colonial control sits at the heart of Unit 5 (Revolutions, 1750-1900) and supports learning objective AP World 5.2.A, which asks you to explain the causes and effects of revolutions from 1750 to 1900. You can't explain the Haitian Revolution, the Latin American independence movements, or Māori resistance during the New Zealand Wars without naming colonial control as the cause people were fighting. It also threads the Governance theme across the whole course. Colonial control is established in Units 4 and 6, challenged in Unit 5, and dismantled in Unit 8. If you can track how it's built, contested, and broken, you've got a ready-made continuity-and-change argument for essays.
Keep studying AP® World Unit 5
Nationalism (Unit 5)
Colonial control and nationalism are cause and effect. Foreign rule gave colonized people a common enemy, and shared language, religion, and territory gave them a common identity. The Māori developed a stronger nationalist identity precisely because British colonial control threatened their land and sovereignty.
Imperialism (Unit 6)
Imperialism is the policy of building an empire; colonial control is what that policy looks like on the ground in one territory. Unit 6 covers how powers established and justified control (think the Berlin Conference carving up Africa), while Unit 5 covers what happens when people resist it.
American Revolution (Unit 5)
The American Revolution is your earliest exam-ready example of colonial subjects rejecting colonial control. British colonists used Enlightenment ideas like natural rights and popular sovereignty to argue that London had no legitimate authority over them, a script later revolutions reused.
Decolonization (Unit 8)
Decolonization is colonial control's endgame. The independence movements of the 20th century (Unit 8) finished what the 1750-1900 revolutions started, which makes colonial control a perfect spine for a long-essay argument about continuity and change across periods.
You won't be asked to recite a definition of colonial control. You'll be asked to explain what it caused and how people responded to it. Multiple-choice questions typically pair the term with a specific case, like asking how the Haitian Revolution altered colonial control globally, or asking what broader context explains Māori nationalist identity during the New Zealand Wars (1845-1872). The right answer almost always connects resistance to colonial control with Atlantic revolutionary ideals or rising nationalism. No released FRQ has used this exact phrase, but it's the kind of analytical glue LEQs and DBQs reward. If the prompt asks about causes of revolution, effects of imperialism, or the development of nationalism, naming colonial control as the underlying condition gives your thesis a clear engine.
Imperialism is the broader project of one state extending power over others, through colonies, economic pressure, or spheres of influence. Colonial control is one specific form of it, the direct political and economic dominance over a territory and its people. All colonial control is imperialism, but not all imperialism involves formal colonies. Britain's economic grip on Latin America after independence was imperialism without colonial control.
Colonial control means a foreign power dominates a territory politically and economically, imposing its own governance, economy, and culture on the people living there.
In Topic 5.2, colonial control is the main cause that revolutions from 1750 to 1900 reacted against, supporting learning objective AP World 5.2.A.
Colonial control backfired on colonizers by giving colonized peoples a shared enemy, which helped forge national identities based on common language, religion, customs, and territory.
The Haitian Revolution is the strongest example to cite, because enslaved people in Saint-Domingue overthrew French colonial control using the same revolutionary ideals circulating in the Atlantic world.
Colonial control is a cross-period concept, established in Units 4 and 6, challenged by revolutions in Unit 5, and ended by decolonization in Unit 8.
Colonial control is the political and economic dominance a colonial power exerts over a territory and its people, including imposing foreign governance, economic systems, and cultural practices. In Unit 5, it's the condition that sparked revolutions and nationalist movements from 1750 to 1900.
Imperialism is the overall project of extending a state's power abroad, while colonial control is the direct, on-the-ground domination of a specific territory. Britain exerting economic influence over independent Latin American countries was imperialism, but Britain directly governing India was colonial control.
No, it ended in some places but expanded in others. Haiti (1804) and most of Latin America broke free, but European powers were simultaneously extending colonial control over Africa and Asia, which Unit 6 covers. Most of that control didn't end until decolonization in Unit 8.
Enslaved people in Saint-Domingue organized armed resistance against French colonial rule in the late 18th century, drawing on Atlantic revolutionary ideals, and created an independent Black republic that abolished slavery. It proved colonial control could be overthrown from below, which terrified slaveholding empires everywhere.
Foreign rule gave colonized people a shared grievance, and shared language, religion, customs, and territory gave them a shared identity to rally around. The Māori response to British control during the New Zealand Wars (1845-1872) is a classic exam example of resistance strengthening nationalist identity.
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