After his father, King T'Chaka (Kani, The Ghost and the Darkness), is assassinated, T'Challa ascends to the throne as king of the (fictional) majestic African nation of Wakanda, a proud, protectionist nation that that had never been colonized by European influence, and which prides
itself on isolationist policies that keep themselves self - sustaining and avoiding getting into protracted wars.
Not exact matches
Some countries might raise taxes
on American goods just as a reaction to a more
isolationist economic
policy, experts said.
However, if a more
isolationist or nationalist US president emerges from the 2016 electoral process in America, and European electors give ever higher levels of support for nationalist - oriented parties, then we have little reason to expect partnership
on foreign
policy issues, and even fewer reasons to expect multilateral responses to global problems.
It's a deeply affecting film that touches
on race and international politics in a way that's far more interesting and insightful than any of its predecessors by far, as one of its central themes is the idea of Wakanda's
isolationist policy — it exists for its people, and it protects its people, but what of the people outside its borders?