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Unit 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations 10,000 BCE-600 BCE Paleolithic vs Neolithic Societies/Human Migratory Patterns Indo-European Bantu Austronesian Effects of the Agricultural Revolution Effect of following technologies: pottery, plows, woven textiles, metallurgy, wheel Rise of Civilizations: settling, job specialization, rise of patriarchy and class systems etc…. Know the location and the basics about: Mesopotamia Egypt Mojenho Daro and Harappa/Indus Valley Olmecs Chavin Effects of new weapons and modes of transportations Compound bows, iron weapons Horses, chariots Changes in art and architecture Architecture: ziggurats, pyramids, temples, defensive walls, sewage systems, etc Art: sculpture, painting, weaving Literature: Rig Veda, Book of the Dead, Epic of Gilgamesh Changes in record keeping and legal codes: Writing: cuneiform, hieroglyphs, pictographs, Phoenician and other alphabets Laws: Hammurabi, Manu, etc New Religions: Animism/Shamanism, Vedic religion, Hebrew monotheism, Egyptian polytheism, Zoroastrianism Trade Networks: connected EurAsia, isolated Americas…. Unit 2: Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies 600 BCE-600 CE Concept: development and codification of religious and cultural traditions Religions: (Know the essentials of the religions and also consider the following) Continuation and growth of old religions Effect of Judaism in Middle East Mediterranean Vedic religion transformation into Hinduism and rise of caste system, samsara, pantheon of gods (brahma, shiva, Vishnu, etc) Ancestor worship throughout the world: China, Africa, Andes…. Rise of new religions and philosophies: Universal religions: Buddhism rising from Hinduism, Christianity riding from Judaism o Buddism and Christianity’s appeal to and effects on poor, women, etc. Confucianism and its effects on China (filial piety, 5 relationships, Analects) Taoism and its effects on China (Tao te Ching, effect on science, poetry, artc, etc) Greco-Roman philosophical traditions o Use of logic o Plate v Aristotle o Effects on politics Growth of distinct Cultural Expressions: Literature and drama Indian Epics: Mahabharata and Ramayana, Bhagavad Gita Chinese classics: Books of Songs, Rites, History; Analects Greek plays Distinct architectural styles: Indian stupas and temples Greek pillars, Roman aqueducts/Coliseum Mayan pyramids Concept: The Development of States (growth of states and transitions to Empire) Be able to discuss the essential regarding the Rise of and the Effects of the following empires as well as the themes below in regards to these examples: Middle East: Persia East Asia: Qin and Han South Asia: Maurya and Gupta Mediterranean: Phoenicia, Greek city states, Hellenistic and Roman Empires Mesoamerica: Teotihuacan and Maya city states Andean: Moche New administrative techniques and styles Centralized governments Elaborate legal systems and bureaucracies Development of infrastructure Changes in/use of military Use of trade Unique social and economic dimensions developed in imperial societies Growth of cities as centers of trade, administration, and religions: o Persepolis, Pataliputra, Athens, Carthage, Rome, Constantinople, Teotihuacan, Chichen Itza Growth of social hierarchies and dependence of coercive labor (slaves, peasants, etc) Rise of patriarchal traditions Fall of Empires due to internal and external factors Internal: deforestation, desertification, flooding, peasant rebellion, intolerance, etc External: Invasions by nomadic groups o Han vs Xiongnu o Gupta v White Huns o Romans vs Germanic Tribes Concept: Emergence of Transregional Networks of Trade and communication Expansion of Land and Water Routes Silk Roads Indian Ocean Routes Mediterranean routes New technologies that promoted trade Yokes, saddles stirrups Increased usage of horses, oxen, camels Lateen sails, capturing monsoon winds Diffusion of goods, ideas, pathogens, religions along trade routes Spread of new agricultural/irrigation techniques (qanats, aqueducts, terrace farming etc) Spread of luxury goods (silk, indigo, spices, cotton, etc) Nestorian Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, etc. Effect of new diseases on Rome, China, etc Unit 3: Regional and Transregional Interactions 600CE-1450CE (Post-Classical) Concept: Expansion and Intensification of Trade and Communication Networks Growth of existing trade routes and emergence of new connections Silk Roads Mediterranean Sea Trans-Saharan Gold Roads Indian Ocean Trade Network Growth of new cities due the effects of trade Timbuktu Swahili city states Hangzhou Baghdad Venice Tenochtitlan Cahokia The draw of luxury goods and improvements in technologies and banking methods to support trade Luxuries: silk, cotton, porcelain, slaves, exotic animals, gold/salt, spices Technologies: compass, lateen sail, astrolabe, caravan organization/camel saddles Credit and monetization: Islamic sakk and banks, bills of exchange, paper money/flying cash State practices that supported commercial growth: Grand Canal in China Mansa Musa’s security of Gold Roads Minting coins Hanseatic League Expansion of empires facilitated Trans-Eurasian trade and communication as new peoples were drawn into their conqueror’s economies and trade networks: China (Sui, Tang, Song, Yuan/Mongol, Ming) and their conquered tributary states Byzantine Empire Islamic Caliphates (Umayyad, and Abbasid) MONGOLS! Concept: Migrations and their cultural, linguistic, environmental and political effects: Environmental knowledge and technological adaptable increased migration: Vikings and their longships in coastal waters and rivers populated Europe, North America, Russia Arabs/Berbers adopt camels and populate Sahara and surroundings Central Asian steppe nomads use horses to populate steppe regions Environmental and Linguistic Impact of migrations Bantu spread language and use of agriculture/iron technologies throughout Sub-Saharan Africa Maritime migrations of Polynesians brought animals and new plants to islands as they settled Islamic peoples spread Arabic to Middle East, North Africa and East Africa (blends to become Swahili)and Turkish nomads spread Turkish languages throughout Central Asia and Anatolia Concept: Cross-cultural exchanges were fostered by intensification of trade and exchange Islam spreads via trade, also reflects surrounding influences (Judaism, Christianity, Zoroastrianism) Diasporic Communities set up along trade routes/in new trading cities and introduces their culture to new regions Muslim merchant communities in Indian Ocean Region and Gold Roads Chinese merchants communities in southeast Asia Jewish communities in Mediterranean, Silk Roads and Indian Ocean Basin Writings of interregional travelers illustrate the extent and limitations of intercultural knowledge and understanding Ibn Battuta Marco Polo Cross cultural diffusion of literary, artistic, cultural, scientific and technological traditions Spread of Neoconfucianism and Buddhism in East Asia Spread of Buddhism and Hinduism in Southeast Asia Spread of Islam in African and Southeast Asia Influence of Greek and Indian mathematics on Muslim Scholars Return of Greek science and philosophy to Western Europe via Muslim al-Andalus Iberia Spreading of printing press, gunpowder, and compass technologies from East Asia to Islamic Empires and Europe Spread of new foods and disease affects demography Bananas in Africa Champa Rice in East Asia Spread of cotton, sugar and citrus throughout Dar al-Islam and Mediterranean Black Death sweeps across Silk Roads; kills 1/3 of Europe Concept: Continuity and Innovation of States and their interactions Collapse of Empires and the growth of new states: following collapse, many reconstituted governments (ie: Byzantine Empire and China) combined traditional sources of power/legitimacy with new governing innovations: Traditional sources: patriarchy, religion, Mandate of Heaven, etc Innovations: new methods of taxation, tributary systems, Equal Field System, Adaptation of religious institutions (Neoconfucianism) New forms of governance in this era: Islamic states (Abbasid, Muslim Spain, Delhi Sultanate Mongol Khanates City states (Italian, Swahili, Americas, SouthEast Asia) Decentralized governments (feudalism in Europe and Japan) Imperial Aztec and Inca States synthesized local and borrowed political traditions Persian traditions that influenced Islamic and European states Chinese traditions that influenced Japan Interregional contacts and conflicts between states encouraged significant technological and cultural transfers Between Tang China and the Abbasids: ie: Abbasid get printing, Islam established in the Uighur province of China Across the Mongol empire: ie forced relocation practice moves technologies everywhere During the Crusades: ie: Europeans get taste for Asian goods, spark “Age of Discovery”; Muslim science enters Europe Concept: Increased Economic Productive Capacity and Its Consequences Innovations stimulate agricultural and industrial production Champa rice Chinampa system Terracing Horse collar Demand and innovation leads to increase in luxury goods. Porcelain/Silk in China. Rugs in Persia. Cotton in India. Fate of cities dependent on trade, with periods of decline and periods of urban revivalism (know examples from around the world) Decline of urban regions o Invasions o Disease o Little Ice Age o Decline in agricultural productivity Urban revivalism: o End of invasions (Pax Mongolica) o Availability of safe and reliable transport o Increased agricultural productivity=more demand, bigger labor pool Changes in labor, religion and social patterns (gender, family) Free peasant agriculture Nomadic pastoralism Craft production and guild organization Various forms of coerced/unfree labor (serfdom, slaves, mita) Government imposed labor taxes Military obligations Labor rebellions: China, Byzantine Persistence of patriarchy, but some regions where women exercised power (Mongol, West Africa, SE Asia) Effects of religions on gender relations and family (Buddhism, Christianity, Neoconfucianism) Unit 4: Global Interactions 1450-1750 (Early Modern) Concept: Globalizing Networks of Communication and Exchange Innovations in shipbuilding, cartography, and other navigational technologies increase transoceanic travel and trade Astrolabe Revised maps Caravels Remarkable new transoceanic maritime reconnaissance occurred throughout the world Chinese maritime activity expanded into the India Ocean through Ming Admiral Zheng He Portuguese developed school for navigation through Prince Henry and create a trading-post empire Spanish sponsorship of the first Columbian and subsequent voyages across Atlantic and Pacific Northern Atlantic crossing for fishing and settlements, search for Northwest Passage Polynesian networks not yet dramatically affected by Europeans The new global circulation of good was facilitated by royal chartered European monopoly companies that took SILVER from Spanish colonies to purchase Asian goods. European merchants’ roles in Asian trade was characterized as “middleman” Commercialization and the creation of a global economy were intimately connected to the global Silver trade Influenced by mercantilism, joint-stock companies were new methods used by European rulers to control their domestic and colonial economies and by European merchants to compete against one another. The Atlantic system involved the movement of goods, wealth and free and unfree laborers, and the mixing of African, American, and European cultures and people. The new connections between the Eastern and Western hemispheres resulted in the Columbian Exchange European colonization of the Americas led to the spread of diseases (smallpox, measles, influenza) among Amerindian populations American foods became staple crops in various parts of Europe, Asia and Africa. Cash Crops were grown mainly on plantations with coerced labor for the purposes of exportation o Potatoes o Maize o Manioc o Sugar o Tabacco Afro-Eurasian fruit trees, grains, sugar and domesticated animals were brought from the Old World to the New world o Horses, pigs, cattle o Grains from Europe o Okra, rice from Africa Populations in Africa-Eurasia benefited nutritionally from the increased diversity of American food crops European colonization and the introduction of European agriculture and settlement practices in the Americas often affected the physical environment through deforestation and soil depletion (Haiti!) Interaction between the two hemispheres expanded the spread and reform of existing religions and created syncretic belief systems and practices. Islam spreads to new settings in Afro-Eurasia, believers adapt it to local traditions. Christianity continued to spread throughout the world and was increasingly diversified by the process of diffusion and the Reformation Buddhism spreads within Asia Syncretic and new religions develop o Vodun, Santeria, Candomble in the Caribbean o Cult of Saints in Latin America o Sikhism in South Asia As merchants’ profits increased and governments collected more taxes, funding for the visual and performing arts increased Visual and performing arts o Renaissance art in Europe o Wood-block prints in Japan o Post-conquest codices in Mesoamerica Literacy expanded and was accompanied by the proliferation of popular authors, literary forms, and works of literature in Afro-Eurasia o o o o o Shakespeare Cervantes Sundiata Journey to the West Kabuki Concept: New Forms of Social Organization and Modes of Production Traditional peasant labor increased. These changes both fed and responded to growing global demand for raw materials and finished goods Peasant labor intensified in many regions o Development of frontier settlements in Siberia o Cotton textile production in India o Silk textile production in China Slavery in Africa continued both the traditional incorporation of slaves into households and the export of slaves to the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean The growth of the plantation economy increased the demand for slaves in the Americas Colonial economies in the Americas depended on a range of coerced labor o Chattel slavery o Indentured servitude o Encomienda and hacienda system o Spanish adaptation of the Incan Mita system As new social and political elites changed, they also restructured new ethnic, racial, and gender hierarchies. Both imperial conquests and widening global economic opportunities contributed to the formation of new political and economic elites o The Manchus in China o Creole elites in Spanish America o European gentry o Urban commercial entrepreneurs in all major port cities The power of existing political and economic elites fluctuated as they confronted new challenges to their ability to affect the policies of the increasingly powerful monarchs and leaders. o The nobility of Europe o The daimyo of Japan Some notable gender and family restructuring occurred o Dependence on European men on Southeast Asian women for conducting trade in that region o Smaller size of European families o Gender Imbalance in West Africa due to Slave Trade Massive demographic changes result in new ethnic and racial classifications o Mestizo o Mulatto o Creole Concept: State Consolidation and Imperial Expansion Rulers used a variety of methods to legitimize and consolidate their power Rulers used the arts to display political power o Monumental architecture (Versailles, Forbidden City, Topkapi Palace) o Urban design o Courtly literature o Visual arts Rulers used religious ideas to legitimize rule o European divine right o Safavid use of Twelver Shiism o Mexica practice of human sacrifice o Songhay promotion of Islam o Chinese Mandate of Heaven States treated different ethnic groups and religious groups in ways that utilized their economic contributions while limited their ability to challenge the authority of the state o Ottoman treatment of non-Muslim subjects o Manchu policies towards Chinese Recruitment and use of bureaucratic elite and military professionals o Ottoman devshirme o Chinese examination system o Salaried samurai Rulers used tribute collection and tax farming to generate revenue for territorial expansion Imperial expansion relied on the increased use of gunpowder, cannons, and armed trade to establish large empires in both hemispheres. Europeans establish new trading-post empires in Africa and Asia. While profitable for rulers and merchants involved in new global trade networks, these empires affected the power of states in interior West and Central Africa Land empires expanded dramatically in size o Manchus o Mughals o Ottomans o Russians European states establish new maritime empires in the Americas o Portuguese o Spanish o Dutch o British o French Competition over trade routes, state rivalries, and local resistance all provided significant challenges to state consolidation and expansion Competition over trade routes o Omani-European rivalry in the Indian Ocean o Piracy in the Caribbean State rivalries o Thirty-Years War o Ottoman-Safavid Conflict Local resistance o Food riots o Samurai revolts o Peasant uprisings Unit 5: Industrialization and Global Integration: 1750-1900 (Long Century) Concept: Industrialization and Global Capitalism Industrialization fundamentally changed how goods were produced. A variety of factors led to the rise of industrial production o Europe’s location on the Atlantic Ocean o Geographical distribution of coal, iron and timber o Demographic changes o Urbanization o Improved agriculture o Legal protection of private property o An abundance of rivers and canals o Access to foreign resources o Accumulation of capital The development of machines made it possible to exploit vast new resources and increase the energy available to human societies o Steam and combustion engines o Fossil fuels: coal and oil The factory system concentrated labor in a single location and led to an increasing degree of specialization of labor Industrialization spreads from England, to Western Europe and then to the USA, Russia, and Japan The “second industrial revolution” led to new methods in the production of steel, chemicals, electricity and precision machinery during the second half of the 19th century New patterns of global trade and production developed and further integrated the global economy as industrialists sought raw materials and new markets for the increasing amount and array of goods produced in their factories The need for raw materials and more food for growing cities led to the growth of export economies around the world that specialized in mass producing single natural resources (CASH CROPS) o Cotton o Rubber o Palm oil o Sugar o Wheat o Meat o Guano o Metals and minerals The rapid development of industrial production contributed to the decline of economically productive, agriculturally based economies o Textile production in India Increased productivity encouraged industrial states to seek out new consumer markets o British and French attempt to “open up” Chinese markets during the 19th century The demand for metals for industrial production led to the development of extensive mining centers o Copper mines in Mexico o Gold and diamond mines in South Africa Financial institutions expand to support industrialization Adam Smith’s development of capitalism and John Stuart Mill’s development of classical liberalism inspire/support economic changes Financial instruments expand o Stock markets o Insurance o Gold standard o Limited liability corporations Rise of large-scale transnational businesses o United Fruit Company o HSBC: Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Major developments in transportation and communication Required Examples: o Railroads o Steamships o Telegraphs o Canals The development and spread of global capitalism led to a variety of responses In Industrialized states, workers organized to support their rights while others opposed capitalist society by promoting alternate visions of society o Utopian socialism o Marxism o Anarchism In Qing China and Ottoman Empire, some leaders resisted change and attempted to maintain preindustrial forms of economic production In a small number of states, governments promoted state-sponsored industrialization o Meiji Japan and Zaibatsu o Development of factories and railroads in Tsarist Russia o China’s Self-Strengthening movement o Muhammed Ali’s development of a cotton textile industry in Egypt Some governments mitigated the negative effects of industrial capitalism by promoting various types of reform o State pensions and public health in Germany o Expansion of suffrage in Britain o Public education The ways in which people organized themselves into societies also underwent major changes in industrialized states due to the fundamental restructuring of the global economy New social classes developed o Middle class o Industrial working class Family dynamics, gender roles, and demographics changed in response to industrialization Rapid urbanization often led to unsanitary conditions as well as new forms on community Concept: Imperialism and Nation-State Formation Industrializing powers established transoceanic empires States with existing colonies strengthened their control over those colonies o British in India o Dutch in Indonesia European states, as well as American and Japanese states, established empires throughout Asia and the Pacific, while Spanish and Portuguese influence died o British o Dutch o German o French o German o Russian Many European states used both warfare and diplomacy to establish empires in Africa o British in West Africa o Belgians in Congo In some parts of the empires, Europeans established settler colonies o British in southern Africa, Australia, New Zealand o French in Algeria In other parts of the world, industrialized states practiced economic imperialism o British and French and the Opium Wars in China o British and USA investing heavily in Latin America Imperialism influenced state formation and contraction around the world The expansion of US and European Influence over Tokugawa Japan led to the emergence of Meiji Japan The USA and Russia expanded their land borders and conquered neighboring territories Anti-imperial resistance led to the contraction of the Ottoman Empire o Establishment of independent Balkan states o Semi-independence in Egypt, French and Italian colonies in North Africa o Later British influence in Egypt New states developed on the edges of existing empires o Cherokee Nation o Siam o Hawaii o Zulu Nation The development of nationalism as an ideology fostered new communal identities o German nationalism o Filipino nationalism New racial ideologies, especially Social Darwinism, facilitated and justified imperialism Concept: Nationalism, Revolution, and Reform The rise and diffusion of Enlightenment thought often preceded the revolutions against existing governments Thinkers applied new ways of understanding the natural world to human relationships o Voltaire o Rousseau Intellectuals critiqued the role that religion played in public life Enlightenment thinkers developed new political ideas about the individual, natural rights, and the social contract o Locke o Montesquieu The ideas of Enlightenment thinkers influenced resistance to existing poltical authority, as reflected in revolutionary documents o The American Declaration of Independence o The French Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen o Bolivar’s Jamaica Letter These ideas expanded into other social realms to initiate change o Suffrage o Abolition o End of serfdom Beginning in the 18th century, peoples around the world developed a new sense of commonality based on language, religion, social custom, and territory. These newly imagined national communities linked this identity with the borders of the state, while governments used this idea to unite diverse populations Increasing discontent with imperial rules propelled reformist and revolutionary movements Subjects challenged the centralized imperial governments o Janissaries’ rebellion o Marathas challenge to the Mughal American colonial subjects led a series of rebellions, which facilitated the emergence of independent states and revolutionized governments o American Revolution o French Revolution o Haitian Revolution o Latin American independence movements Slave resistance challenged existing authorities in the Americas o Maroon societies o North American slave rebellions Anticolonial movements rise o Indian (Sepoy) Revolt of 1857 o Boxer Rebellion Some rebellions were influenced by religious ideas and millenarianism o Taiping Rebellion o The Ghost Dance o The Xhosa Cattle-Killing Movement Responses to rebellions led to reforms in imperial policies o Tanzimat Reforms o The Self-Strengthening movement The global spread of European political and social thought and the increasing number of rebellions stimulated new transnational ideologies and solidarities Discontent with monarchist and imperial rule encouraged the development of political ideologies, including liberalism, socialism, and communism. Demands for women’s suffrage and an emergent feminism challenged political and gender hierarchies o Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Women o Olympe de Gouge’s “Declaration of the Rights of Women” o The resolutions passed at the Seneca Falls Conference in 1848 Concept: Global Migration Migration in many cases was influenced by changes in demography in both industrialized and unindustrialized societies that presented challenges to existing patterns of living Changes in food production and improved medical conditions contributed to significant global population rise Due to improvements in transportation, both internal and external migrants increasingly relocated to cities. Migrants relocated for a variety of reasons Many individuals chose to freely relocated, often in search of work o Manual laborers o Specialized professionals The new global capitalist economy continued to rely on coerced and semicoerced labor migration o Slavery o Chinese and Indian indentured servitude o Convict labor A significant number of temporary or seasonal migrants returned to their home societies o Japanese agricultural workers in the Pacific o Lebanese merchants in the Americas o Italians in Argentina The large-scale nature of migration, especially in the nineteenth century, produced a variety of consequences and reactions to the increasingly diverse societies on the part of migrants and existing populations Due to physical nature of the labor in demand, most migrants were male, leaving women to take on new roles Migrants often create ethnic enclaves in different parts of the world, which helped transplant their culture and facilitate the development of migrant support networks o Chinese in Southeast Asia, the Caribbean and South America and North America (CHINATOWN) o Indians in east and southern Africa, Caribbean and Southeast Asia o Organized crime networks/Mafias Discrimination often led to policies aimed at reducing flow of new peoples across borders o Chinese exclusion act o White Australia Policy Unit 6: Accelerating Global Change and Realignments 1900-Present (Modern Era) Key Concept: Science and Environment Researchers made rapid advances in the sciences throughout the world New modes of communication and transportation virtually eliminated the problem of geographic distance New scientific paradigms transformed human understanding of the world o The theory of relativity o Quantum mechanics o Big Bang Theory o Psychology The Green Revolution produced food for the rapidly growing population as it spread chemically and genetically enhanced forms of agriculture Medical innovations increased the ability of humans to survive o Polio vaccine o Antibiotics o The artificial heart Energy technologies including the use of oil and nuclear power raised productivity and increased the production of material goods As the global population expanded at an unprecedented rate, humans fundamentally changed their relationship with the environment Humans exploited and compete over the earths finite resources Global warming/climate change was a major consequence of the release of greenhouse gases and other pollutants Pollution threatened the world’s supply of potable water and clean air. Deforestation and desertification escalated. Rates of species extinction also escalated Disease, scientific innovations, and conflict led to demographic shifts Diseases associated with poverty persisted, while other diseases emerged as new epidemics and threats to human survival. In additional, lifestyle changes and increased longevity led to higher incidence of certain diseases o Diseases associated with poverty: Malaria Tuberculosis Cholera o Emergent epidemic diseases 1918 influenza pandemic HIV/AIDS Ebola o Diseases associated with lifestyle change: Diabetes Heart Disease Alzheimer’s More effective forms of birth control gave women greater control over fertility and challenged traditional gender roles Improved military technology and new tactics led to increased levels of wartime casualties o Improved military technology Tanks Airplanes Atomic bomb o New tactics: Trench warfare Firebombing o Wartime Casualties: Nanjing Dresden Hiroshima Concept: Global Conflicts and Their Consequences Europe dominated global political order at the beginning of the 20th century, but both land-based and transoceanic empires gave way to new forms of transregional political organization by the century’s end The older land-based Ottoman, Russian and Wing empires collapsed due to a combination of internal and external factors o Economic hardship o Political and social discontent o Technological stagnation o Military defeat Some colonies negotiated their independence o Indian from the British o Gold Coast from the British Some colonies achieved independence through armed struggle o Algeria and Vietnam from the French o Angola from the Portuguese Emerging ideologies of anti-imperialism contributed to the dissolution of empires and the restructuring of states Nationalist leaders in Asia and Africa challenged imperial rule o Mohandas Gandhi o Ho Chi Minh o Kwame Nkrumah Regional, religious, and ethnic movements challenged colonial rule o Muhammed Ali Jinnah o The Quebecois separatist movement o The Biafra secessionist movement Transnational movements sought to unite people across national boundaries o Communism o Pan-Arabism o Pan-Africanism Movement to redistribute land and resources develop within states in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, sometimes advocating socialism and communism Political changes were accompanied by major demographic and social consequences The redrawing of old colonial boundaries led to population resettlements o India/Pakistan partition o Zionism Jewish settlement of Palestine The division of the Middle East into mandatory States (Mandate System) The migration of former colonial subjects to imperial metropoles maintained cultural and economic ties between the colony and the metropole even after dissolution of empire o South Asians to Britain o Algerians to France o Filipinos to USA The proliferation of conflicts led to various forms of ethnic violence and the displacement of peoples resulting in refugee populations o Ethnic violence/Genocide Armenia Holocaust Cambodia Rwanda o Displacement of peoples Palestinians Darfurians Military conflicts occurred on an unprecedented global scale World War I and World War II were the first “total wars.” Governments used ideologies such as facism, nationalism, and communism to mobilize all of their states resources (including peoples) both in home countries and colonies. o Gurkha soldiers in India o Military conscription The sources of global conflict varied o Imperialism expansion of Europe and Japan o Competition for resources o Ethnic conflict o Great power rivalries between Great Britain and Germany o Nationalism ideologies o Great Depression Post-War balance of power shifted to USA and USSR and sparked the Cold War. Ideological struggle between communism and capitalism begins. The Cold War produced new military alliances, including NATO and Warsaw Pact and promoted proxy wars in Latin America, Africa and Asia The dissolution of the Soviet Union effectively ended the Cold War Although conflict dominated much of the twentieth century, many individuals, groups and states opposed this trend. Some, however, intensified conflicts Groups challenged the many wars of the century and promoted the practice of nonviolence o Picasso in his Guernica o The antinuclear movement during the Cold War o Thich Quang Duc by self-immolation (Buddhist monk on fire) Groups and individuals opposed and promoted alternatives to the existing economic, political and social orders o Communist leaders such as Vladimir Lenin and Mao Zedong o The Non-Aligned Movement o The Anti-Apartheid Movement in South Africa o Participants in the global uprisings on 1968 o The Tiananmen Square protesters Militaries and militarized states often responded to the proliferation of conflicts in ways that further intensified with o The promotion of military dictatorship in Chile, Spain, and Uganda o The US promotion of a New World Order after the Cold War o The buildup of “military industrial complex” More movements used violence against civilians to achieve political aim o IRA o ETA o Al-Qaeda Global conflicts had a profound influence on popular culture o Dada o James Bond o Socialism Realism o Video games Concept: New Conceptualizations of Global Economy, Society and Culture States responded in a variety of ways to the economic challenge of the 20th Century In the Communist states of the Soviet Union and China, governments controlled their national economies o Five Year Plans o Great Leap Forward Originally, American and many European governments played a minimal role in the economy. Their involvement in the economy increased. o The New Deal o Fascist corporatists economies In the newly independent states after WWII, governments took on a strong role in guide economic life to promote development o Nasser’s promotion of economic development in Egypt o The encouragement of export-oriented economies in East Asia At the end of the 20th century, many governments encouraged free market economic policies and promoted economic liberalization o USA under Reagan o Britain under Thatcher o o China under Deng Xiaoping Chile under Pinochet States, communities, and individuals became increasingly interdependent New international organizations formed to maintain world peace and cooperation o League of Nations o United Nations o International Criminal Court New economic institutions sought to spread the principals and practices associated with free market economies o International Monetary Fund o World Bank o World Trade Organization Humanitarian organizations developed to respord to humanitarian crises around the world o UNICEF o Red Cross o Amnesty International o Doctors without Borders o WHO Regional trade agreements created regional trading blocs designed to promote the movement of capital and goods across borders o European Union o NAFTA o ASEAN Multinational Corporations began to challenge state authority and autonomy o Coca-Cola o Sony o Royal Dutch Shell Movements throughout the world protested the inequality of environmental and economic consequences of globalization o Greenpeace o Earth Day People conceptualized society and culture in new ways; some challenged old assumptions about race, class, gender, and religion, often using new technologies to spread reconfigured traditions The notion of human rights spread throughout the world o UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights o Women’s rights o End of the While Australian Policy Increased interactions among diverse peoples sometimes led to the formation of new cultural identities and exclusionary reactions o New identities: Negritude, African Nationalism o Exclusionary reactions Xenophobia Race riots Citizenship restrictions Belivers developed new forms of spirituality and chose to emphasize particular aspects of practice within existing faiths and apply them to political issues o New forms of spirituality New Age religions Hare Krishna Falun Gong o Application of religion to political issues Fundamentalist movements Liberation theology Popular and consumer culture became global Sports were more widely practiced and reflected national and social aspirations o World Cup Soccer o Olympics o Cricket Widespread diffusion of film and music o Reggae o Bollywood