
Divine / Breen / Fredrickson / Williams / Brands / Gross Textbook
... the goal of each nation was to become self-sufficient C each nation benefited from the economic success of other nations D nations should import goods worth the same amount that they exported E colonies were a drain on the economy of the home country An economic system in which a nation seeks to acc ...
... the goal of each nation was to become self-sufficient C each nation benefited from the economic success of other nations D nations should import goods worth the same amount that they exported E colonies were a drain on the economy of the home country An economic system in which a nation seeks to acc ...
DANIEL STRUM. The Sugar Trade: Brazil, Portugal and the
... and Lisbon than with Spanish traders. (The Iberian kingdoms did form a common enemy—the Dutch— while united under Philip II and Philip III from 1580 to ...
... and Lisbon than with Spanish traders. (The Iberian kingdoms did form a common enemy—the Dutch— while united under Philip II and Philip III from 1580 to ...
United States Foreign Policy, 1898 - 1919 - fchs
... Lusitania, a British passenger liner, was sunk on the open seas by a Germany U-boat. Over 1000 passengers died, including 128 Americans. • By 1917, over Allied ships had been sunk by German U-boats, a practice known as “unrestricted submarine warfare.” • After Germany violated the socalled “Sussex P ...
... Lusitania, a British passenger liner, was sunk on the open seas by a Germany U-boat. Over 1000 passengers died, including 128 Americans. • By 1917, over Allied ships had been sunk by German U-boats, a practice known as “unrestricted submarine warfare.” • After Germany violated the socalled “Sussex P ...
File
... 1. Which issue was a cause of the French Revolution? (a) ineffective rule of Napoleon Bonaparte (b) nationalization of the Church (c) outrage over the use of the guillotine by the Committee of Public Safety (d) demand of the Third Estate for more political power "The pretended power of suspending [e ...
... 1. Which issue was a cause of the French Revolution? (a) ineffective rule of Napoleon Bonaparte (b) nationalization of the Church (c) outrage over the use of the guillotine by the Committee of Public Safety (d) demand of the Third Estate for more political power "The pretended power of suspending [e ...
Regional Outline for: Sub
... Scientific Rev. challenged aspects of Roman Catholicism, but people learned to be both ...
... Scientific Rev. challenged aspects of Roman Catholicism, but people learned to be both ...
instructional objectives
... certain industries that can’t compete successfully with imports. 2. Political considerations are important because consumers don’t see the effects of a tariff or quota directly, but they do see the impact of import competition on some workers. Also, the benefits of free trade tend to be spread among ...
... certain industries that can’t compete successfully with imports. 2. Political considerations are important because consumers don’t see the effects of a tariff or quota directly, but they do see the impact of import competition on some workers. Also, the benefits of free trade tend to be spread among ...
1bUnit 2(1)
... Long before the Tang Dynasty was founded, Buddhism had made its way into China along the trade routes. By the pre-Tang era, Buddhist monasteries had so grown in influence that they held huge tracts of land and exerted political influence. Many rulers of the pre-Tang era, particularly those from noma ...
... Long before the Tang Dynasty was founded, Buddhism had made its way into China along the trade routes. By the pre-Tang era, Buddhist monasteries had so grown in influence that they held huge tracts of land and exerted political influence. Many rulers of the pre-Tang era, particularly those from noma ...
The World Economy in the New Millennium
... Novelty seeking and risk taking would have endangered these socially accepted ways of making a living. The periodic raids on its merchants’ wealth by the predatory state would not have been unpopular in these ancient agrarian civilizations. Though these maverick capitalists existed in all the ancien ...
... Novelty seeking and risk taking would have endangered these socially accepted ways of making a living. The periodic raids on its merchants’ wealth by the predatory state would not have been unpopular in these ancient agrarian civilizations. Though these maverick capitalists existed in all the ancien ...
An Age of Exploration
... New $ and banking system is created This is due to the huge amounts of resources pouring back into Europe from the Americas Inflation (prices rise because value of money goes down) ...
... New $ and banking system is created This is due to the huge amounts of resources pouring back into Europe from the Americas Inflation (prices rise because value of money goes down) ...
The Cultural Dimension of Globalization
... territorial nation state had emerged by 1648 as the modern container of social life. As the early modern period drew to a close, interdependencies among nation-states were multiplying as well as increasing in density. Global integration continued through the expansion of European trade in the 16th ...
... territorial nation state had emerged by 1648 as the modern container of social life. As the early modern period drew to a close, interdependencies among nation-states were multiplying as well as increasing in density. Global integration continued through the expansion of European trade in the 16th ...
Chapter 6
... some good that may be imported into a country Tariff rate quotas - a hybrid of a quota and a tariff where a lower tariff is applied to imports within the quota than to those over the quota Voluntary export restraints - quotas on trade imposed by the exporting country, typically at the request of ...
... some good that may be imported into a country Tariff rate quotas - a hybrid of a quota and a tariff where a lower tariff is applied to imports within the quota than to those over the quota Voluntary export restraints - quotas on trade imposed by the exporting country, typically at the request of ...
AP World History: Syllabus 2015-2016
... medieval Europe? Are there other “Renaissances” in other parts of the world? If so, how might this change our understanding of this term as a marker of a particular period in time? [CR11] • Debate: Who was Christopher Columbus – hero or villain? Students will use primary sources listed (see Suppleme ...
... medieval Europe? Are there other “Renaissances” in other parts of the world? If so, how might this change our understanding of this term as a marker of a particular period in time? [CR11] • Debate: Who was Christopher Columbus – hero or villain? Students will use primary sources listed (see Suppleme ...
Globalization - White Plains Public Schools
... took shape from the experience of women who had worked in other kinds of radical politics, such as the civil rights movement. Widely known as “women’s liberation,” this approach took broader aim at patriarchy as a system of domination, similar to those of race and class. Yet another strand of Wester ...
... took shape from the experience of women who had worked in other kinds of radical politics, such as the civil rights movement. Widely known as “women’s liberation,” this approach took broader aim at patriarchy as a system of domination, similar to those of race and class. Yet another strand of Wester ...
Unit 24 Globalization and Economics
... It would be inaccurate, though, to view FIEs as one homogenous group. They often vary greatly in size, location, business activity, capitalization, and ownership. These differences in turn affect the FIE’s relationships to regulatory authorities, employees and the communities in which they operate. ...
... It would be inaccurate, though, to view FIEs as one homogenous group. They often vary greatly in size, location, business activity, capitalization, and ownership. These differences in turn affect the FIE’s relationships to regulatory authorities, employees and the communities in which they operate. ...
Chapter 23
... Cross Staff and back staff (European)- measures the angle of the sun or pole star to determine latitude. ...
... Cross Staff and back staff (European)- measures the angle of the sun or pole star to determine latitude. ...
Word - State of New Jersey
... Explain major changes in world political boundaries between 1450 and 1770, and assess the extent of European political and military control in Africa, Asia, and the Americas by the mid-18th century. ...
... Explain major changes in world political boundaries between 1450 and 1770, and assess the extent of European political and military control in Africa, Asia, and the Americas by the mid-18th century. ...
global political economy
... A win-lose proposition or zero-sum game. One nation gains from a foreign policy, while the partner country becomes worse off. If all states practice neomercantilist policies, then all countries become worse off (lose-lose outcome. The relation between economic neomercantilism versus political realis ...
... A win-lose proposition or zero-sum game. One nation gains from a foreign policy, while the partner country becomes worse off. If all states practice neomercantilist policies, then all countries become worse off (lose-lose outcome. The relation between economic neomercantilism versus political realis ...
PART I From Hunting and Gathering to Civilizations, 2.5 million
... Atlantic slave trade had enormous consequences on both sides of the ocean. New Empires. The new empires formed in this period often represented significant shifts in power. The power of Europe, in particular, increased, although it was not alone. These shifts in some cases translated into serious im ...
... Atlantic slave trade had enormous consequences on both sides of the ocean. New Empires. The new empires formed in this period often represented significant shifts in power. The power of Europe, in particular, increased, although it was not alone. These shifts in some cases translated into serious im ...
The Silk Roads: A New History of the World
... split and converged across the breadth of Asia for a quarter of the length of the equator. Along these arteries, people, goods, ideas, religions, diseases and many other commodities and cultural products have flowed, and different groups met, negotiated, and traded together for millennia. In arguing ...
... split and converged across the breadth of Asia for a quarter of the length of the equator. Along these arteries, people, goods, ideas, religions, diseases and many other commodities and cultural products have flowed, and different groups met, negotiated, and traded together for millennia. In arguing ...
The Industrial Revolution
... abandonment of slavery was less a social or moral issue than one of economics - In 1813, after war with France, UK flooded India with cheap cotton exports, India went from luxury fabric exporter to major market for cheap fabric (1873 – 60% of UK cotton exports to India) - Mercantilism relied on the ...
... abandonment of slavery was less a social or moral issue than one of economics - In 1813, after war with France, UK flooded India with cheap cotton exports, India went from luxury fabric exporter to major market for cheap fabric (1873 – 60% of UK cotton exports to India) - Mercantilism relied on the ...
chapter 29 - Miami Beach Senior High School
... 1. The industrialization of Europe and North America stimulated a demand for minerals, industrial crops, and stimulants (sugar, coffee, tea, and tobacco). The economic depression of the mid-1870s to the mid1890s gave the industrialized countries an incentive to seek control of the sources of raw mat ...
... 1. The industrialization of Europe and North America stimulated a demand for minerals, industrial crops, and stimulants (sugar, coffee, tea, and tobacco). The economic depression of the mid-1870s to the mid1890s gave the industrialized countries an incentive to seek control of the sources of raw mat ...
Model Test 1
... (B) Their leaders began to rely on astrology to guide their decision making. (C) Both fell owing to depletion of natural resources. (D) Outside invaders contributed to the collapse of both empires. (E) Both collapsed owing to lack of technological innovation. 50. Which statement below does NO ...
... (B) Their leaders began to rely on astrology to guide their decision making. (C) Both fell owing to depletion of natural resources. (D) Outside invaders contributed to the collapse of both empires. (E) Both collapsed owing to lack of technological innovation. 50. Which statement below does NO ...
Document
... – ex. Most Western European nations (UK, France, Spain, Germany, etc.), the United States, but only a few non-Western countries like Japan ...
... – ex. Most Western European nations (UK, France, Spain, Germany, etc.), the United States, but only a few non-Western countries like Japan ...
Ch. 14 Notes - Ms. Cabrera
... and peanuts spread throughout China and made up 20 percent of their agricultural produce by the early twentieth century • American tobacco and chocolate, Chinese tea, and Arab coffee: As a truly global exchange developed, people began to consume a variety of stimulants from around the world • Tobacc ...
... and peanuts spread throughout China and made up 20 percent of their agricultural produce by the early twentieth century • American tobacco and chocolate, Chinese tea, and Arab coffee: As a truly global exchange developed, people began to consume a variety of stimulants from around the world • Tobacc ...
APWH Final Book Review Project
... Four Reigns by Kukrit Pramoj. Looks at the reigns of four Thai kings, and the social and political changes in Bangkok from the end of the 19th C to WWII The Glass Palace by Amitav Ghosh. Describes life in Burma and for Burmese Indians during the British conquest, WWII and up to the imprisonment of ...
... Four Reigns by Kukrit Pramoj. Looks at the reigns of four Thai kings, and the social and political changes in Bangkok from the end of the 19th C to WWII The Glass Palace by Amitav Ghosh. Describes life in Burma and for Burmese Indians during the British conquest, WWII and up to the imprisonment of ...
Proto-globalization

Proto-globalization or early modern globalization is a period of the history of globalization roughly spanning the years between 1600 and 1800, following the period of archaic globalization. First introduced by historians A. G. Hopkins and Christopher Bayly, the term describes the phase of increasing trade links and cultural exchange that characterized the period immediately preceding the advent of so-called 'modern globalization' in the 19th century.Proto-globalization distinguished itself from modern globalization on the basis of expansionism, the method of managing global trade, and the level of information exchange. The period of proto-globalization is marked by such trade arrangements as the East India Company, the shift of hegemony to Western Europe, the rise of larger-scale conflicts between powerful nations such as the Thirty Year War, and a rise of new commodities—most particularly slave trade. The Triangular Trade made it possible for Europe to take advantage of resources within the western hemisphere. The transfer of plant and animal crops and epidemic diseases associated with Alfred Crosby's concept of The Columbian Exchange also played a central role in this process. Proto-globalization trade and communications involved a vast group including European, Muslim, Indian, Southeast Asian and Chinese merchants, particularly in the Indian Ocean region.The transition from proto-globalization to modern globalization was marked with a more complex global network based on both capitalistic and technological exchange; however, it led to a significant collapse in cultural exchange.