
Lecture V: Globalization and Communication
... Castells, M. (1996). The Rise of the Network Society. Wiley-Blackwell Castells, M. (2001). The Internet Galaxy – Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society. University of Oxford Press Habermas, J. (1996). The Postnational Constellation. Polity Press Innis, H. (1950). Empire and Communication ...
... Castells, M. (1996). The Rise of the Network Society. Wiley-Blackwell Castells, M. (2001). The Internet Galaxy – Reflections on the Internet, Business, and Society. University of Oxford Press Habermas, J. (1996). The Postnational Constellation. Polity Press Innis, H. (1950). Empire and Communication ...
WHAP Review for Year
... Compare the caste system with other systems of social inequality Compare society and culture of civilizations with pastoral and nomadic societies Compare the development of traditions and institutions in major civilizations- India, China, Rome, Greece Describe the interregional trading systems Compa ...
... Compare the caste system with other systems of social inequality Compare society and culture of civilizations with pastoral and nomadic societies Compare the development of traditions and institutions in major civilizations- India, China, Rome, Greece Describe the interregional trading systems Compa ...
) Review Questions > Answers and Explanations
... 1. B-The Treaty of Nanking (1842) made Hong Kong a British colony. The Qing overtook the Ming in 1644, while the Opium War occurred between 1839 and 1842 (A). China's silver supply was drained to purchase opium (C) and was not immediately restored since the opium trade continued after the war (D). F ...
... 1. B-The Treaty of Nanking (1842) made Hong Kong a British colony. The Qing overtook the Ming in 1644, while the Opium War occurred between 1839 and 1842 (A). China's silver supply was drained to purchase opium (C) and was not immediately restored since the opium trade continued after the war (D). F ...
World Geography SOL Warmup Questions
... 19. Which of the following has the most negative affect on a nation’s ability to exchange goods with other nations? A. not being a member of the European Union B. being a landlocked country C. having extensive transportation and communication networks D. being a member of the Islamic ...
... 19. Which of the following has the most negative affect on a nation’s ability to exchange goods with other nations? A. not being a member of the European Union B. being a landlocked country C. having extensive transportation and communication networks D. being a member of the Islamic ...
Fall Semester Review Key File
... thought Cortez was their lost God – Quetzalcoatl. The Inca at Machu Pichu dominated the Andes Mountains and built extensive roads for communication and military movement. The Mita System provided labor but they had almost no trade system. European arrival would be devastating. African Slave Trade: D ...
... thought Cortez was their lost God – Quetzalcoatl. The Inca at Machu Pichu dominated the Andes Mountains and built extensive roads for communication and military movement. The Mita System provided labor but they had almost no trade system. European arrival would be devastating. African Slave Trade: D ...
Unit Notes
... provide goods and services that they do not have. Economic interdependence happens when countries must rely on each other’s help. ...
... provide goods and services that they do not have. Economic interdependence happens when countries must rely on each other’s help. ...
Chapter 14: Chapter Outline The following annotated chapter outline
... Distinguishing power and authority: Some scholars have made a distinction between “power,” the ability of a state to coerce its subjects into some required behavior, and “authority,” the ability of a state to persuade its subjects to do its bidding voluntarily by convincing them that it is proper, r ...
... Distinguishing power and authority: Some scholars have made a distinction between “power,” the ability of a state to coerce its subjects into some required behavior, and “authority,” the ability of a state to persuade its subjects to do its bidding voluntarily by convincing them that it is proper, r ...
PETERS TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT CORE BODY OF
... Throughout North and South America during this period, and still today, the Spanish people, language, and culture greatly affected society. The Dutch, Spanish, English and French all competed to settle and control North America, with the English emerging victorious for the most part. English settler ...
... Throughout North and South America during this period, and still today, the Spanish people, language, and culture greatly affected society. The Dutch, Spanish, English and French all competed to settle and control North America, with the English emerging victorious for the most part. English settler ...
AP World History Multiple Choice Questions 1750
... D) factory owners almost always made changes because they realized a happy, healthy, well-paid work force could be more productive E) the number of people with influence – aristocracy and middle class – increased pressuring the government to act on behalf of the workers ...
... D) factory owners almost always made changes because they realized a happy, healthy, well-paid work force could be more productive E) the number of people with influence – aristocracy and middle class – increased pressuring the government to act on behalf of the workers ...
Chapter 2: The Rise of the Atlantic World 1400-1625
... dance and music. Islam appealed to merchants and to kings and emperors eager to consolidate their power. By the 15th century Islam began to affect the daily lives of some cultivators and artisans while Christianity introduced by the Portuguese remained limited until the 19th century. c. European C ...
... dance and music. Islam appealed to merchants and to kings and emperors eager to consolidate their power. By the 15th century Islam began to affect the daily lives of some cultivators and artisans while Christianity introduced by the Portuguese remained limited until the 19th century. c. European C ...
Notes
... • Policies aim to ensure the free movement of people, goods, services, and capital within the internal market and maintain common policies on trade, agriculture, fisheries, and regional development. • Passport controls have been abolished. • A monetary union was established in 1999 and came into ful ...
... • Policies aim to ensure the free movement of people, goods, services, and capital within the internal market and maintain common policies on trade, agriculture, fisheries, and regional development. • Passport controls have been abolished. • A monetary union was established in 1999 and came into ful ...
Time Period III
... The Byzantine Empire = Rome continued in the East Europe experiences disruption and new cultural forms (Vikings, feudalism, & the rise of Roman Catholic Christianity); Russia’s culture looks to Byzantium Tang and Song Dynasty China drive economic innovation (flying money, paper money, banking, & mas ...
... The Byzantine Empire = Rome continued in the East Europe experiences disruption and new cultural forms (Vikings, feudalism, & the rise of Roman Catholic Christianity); Russia’s culture looks to Byzantium Tang and Song Dynasty China drive economic innovation (flying money, paper money, banking, & mas ...
Sub Unit - mrsommerglobal10
... What were the political, economic, and social consequences of the expulsion of the Jews and Muslims for Spain? What were Spain and Portugal like on the eve of the Encounter? What kinds of encounters were made as a result of the initial Spanish and Portuguese voyages of discovery? As a result ...
... What were the political, economic, and social consequences of the expulsion of the Jews and Muslims for Spain? What were Spain and Portugal like on the eve of the Encounter? What kinds of encounters were made as a result of the initial Spanish and Portuguese voyages of discovery? As a result ...
Periods 1- 3 Practice KEY
... C) Only land-based routes such as the Silk Road were used for trade. D) Merchants used waterways in addition to land-based routes. 39. Trade flourished during the Mauryan and Gupta periods in India and the Han period in China because A) the rulers used their vast armies to seize mineral-rich lands i ...
... C) Only land-based routes such as the Silk Road were used for trade. D) Merchants used waterways in addition to land-based routes. 39. Trade flourished during the Mauryan and Gupta periods in India and the Han period in China because A) the rulers used their vast armies to seize mineral-rich lands i ...
Global Impacts of Imperialism
... Africans, Chinese, Indians, and many other peoples were collectively dominated during the Age of Imperialism. Decline of the Muslim World The Muslim world extended from western Africa to Southeast Asia. By the 1700s, the Mughals in India, the Ottoman Turks in the Middle East, and the Safavids in Ira ...
... Africans, Chinese, Indians, and many other peoples were collectively dominated during the Age of Imperialism. Decline of the Muslim World The Muslim world extended from western Africa to Southeast Asia. By the 1700s, the Mughals in India, the Ottoman Turks in the Middle East, and the Safavids in Ira ...
Slide 1
... • Before 600CE • Empires with strong militaries and centralized governments • All pressured and defeated bypeoples from the Asian Steppe • Han, Rome, Maurya and Gupta ...
... • Before 600CE • Empires with strong militaries and centralized governments • All pressured and defeated bypeoples from the Asian Steppe • Han, Rome, Maurya and Gupta ...
Lecture no. 5
... that wealth was necessary to acquire and maintain power; and that national power was equally necessary to acquire and protect national wealth iii) national wealth: according to the core monetary belief: that precious metals (gold and silver) were either the sole forms of wealth, or the best means of ...
... that wealth was necessary to acquire and maintain power; and that national power was equally necessary to acquire and protect national wealth iii) national wealth: according to the core monetary belief: that precious metals (gold and silver) were either the sole forms of wealth, or the best means of ...
Chapter 13 Section 1 - Exploration _ Expansion
... Many of these natives worked in gold & Silver mines & sugar plantations. Many died under poor working conditions. This along with disease wiped out huge number of the population. Mexico had a population of 25 Million in 1500, by 1630 only 1 million remained. ...
... Many of these natives worked in gold & Silver mines & sugar plantations. Many died under poor working conditions. This along with disease wiped out huge number of the population. Mexico had a population of 25 Million in 1500, by 1630 only 1 million remained. ...
WS/FCS
... colonization, and conflict among nations. WH.H.5.2 Explain the causes and effects of exploration and expansion. WH.H.5.3 Analyze colonization in terms of the desire for access to resources and markets as well as the consequences on indigenous cultures, population, and environment. WH.H.5.4 Analyze t ...
... colonization, and conflict among nations. WH.H.5.2 Explain the causes and effects of exploration and expansion. WH.H.5.3 Analyze colonization in terms of the desire for access to resources and markets as well as the consequences on indigenous cultures, population, and environment. WH.H.5.4 Analyze t ...
unit v geography: the map of the first global civilization
... Between 1750 and 1914, world history was dominated by European imperialism. These were the decades in which Western civilization experienced the Industrial Revolution, which transformed the bases of production through new technology and new sources of power. European dominance in the world economy b ...
... Between 1750 and 1914, world history was dominated by European imperialism. These were the decades in which Western civilization experienced the Industrial Revolution, which transformed the bases of production through new technology and new sources of power. European dominance in the world economy b ...
Characteristics of Periods and Chronology
... New institutions and traditions arose from commerce, intellectual pursuits including the Scientific Revolution, and changes in religion. It also represented the appearance of Europeans on the world stage, which however at this time they could not dominate except for the Americas. This period also sa ...
... New institutions and traditions arose from commerce, intellectual pursuits including the Scientific Revolution, and changes in religion. It also represented the appearance of Europeans on the world stage, which however at this time they could not dominate except for the Americas. This period also sa ...
25 of these questions will be on your final. In the early years of
... brought greater prosperity to China than to the West. ...
... brought greater prosperity to China than to the West. ...
Chapter 16—The Latin West 1200-1500
... Parliament and the French king to the Estates General. Iberian Unification Spain and Portugal became strong, centralized states through a process of marriage alliances, mergers, warfare, and the reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula from the Muslims. Reconquest offered the nobility large landed esta ...
... Parliament and the French king to the Estates General. Iberian Unification Spain and Portugal became strong, centralized states through a process of marriage alliances, mergers, warfare, and the reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula from the Muslims. Reconquest offered the nobility large landed esta ...
World Economy Theory 1500-1800 (Questions 19-21)
... trade. Dependent economies used slave or serf labor to produce cheap foods and minerals for Europe and they imported more expensive European items in turn. Dependent regions had weak governments which made European penetration and slave systems possible. ...
... trade. Dependent economies used slave or serf labor to produce cheap foods and minerals for Europe and they imported more expensive European items in turn. Dependent regions had weak governments which made European penetration and slave systems possible. ...
F:\CHY4U\CHY4U school files\Unit 3\Practice Test Unit Three.wpd
... D. Universal suffrage E. Primary education for all 20. This war used the first modern methods of warfare: railway and telegraph, as well as munitions manufactured by the German company Krupp: A. Boer War B. Franco-Prussian War C. Russo-Japanese War D. Crimean War E. American Civil War 21. Colonial r ...
... D. Universal suffrage E. Primary education for all 20. This war used the first modern methods of warfare: railway and telegraph, as well as munitions manufactured by the German company Krupp: A. Boer War B. Franco-Prussian War C. Russo-Japanese War D. Crimean War E. American Civil War 21. Colonial r ...
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.