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Beginning in the 15th century, the Age of Discovery, Europeans carried the capitalist system burgeoning at home to distant places, whose labour and productivity were harnessed to the European core in an unequal, colonial relationship. The result was the capitalist world system, as Immanuel M. Wallerstein in The Modern World-System (1974) terms it. There was increasing economic and productive specialization among the world’s regions, as a pattern of unequal exchange developed between the industrial commodities of the advanced European nations (at the world system’s core) and the raw materials from underdeveloped Asia, Africa, and the New World (at the world ...(100 of 6360 words)