Period 6 Reading Schedule - Joel...

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Key Concept 6.1 Science and the Environment Rapid advances in science altered understandings of the universe and the natural world and led to the development of new technologies. These changes enabled unprecedented popula9on growth, which altered how humans interacted with the environment and threatened delicate ecological balances at local, regional and global levels. Key Concept 6.2 Global Conflicts and their Consequences At the beginning of the 20th century, a Europeandominated global poli9cal order existed, which also included the United States, Russia and Japan. Over the course of the century, peoples and states around the world challenged this order in ways that sought to redistribute power within the exis9ng order and restructure empires, while those people and states in power aFempted to maintain the status quo. Other peoples and states sought to overturn the poli9cal order itself. These challenges to and aFempts to maintain the poli9cal order manifested themselves in an unprecedented level of conflict with high human casual9es. In the context of these conflicts, many regimes in both older and newer states struggled with maintaining poli9cal stability and were challenged by internal and external factors, including ethnic and religious conflicts, secessionist movements, territorial par99ons, economic dependency and the legacies of colonialism. Key Concept 6.3 New ConceptualizaCons of Global Economy, Society, and Culture The twen9eth century witnessed a great deal of warfare and the collapse of the global economy in the 1930s. In response to these challenges, the role of the state in the domes9c economy fluctuated new ins9tu9ons of global governance emerged and con9nued to develop throughout the century. Scien9fic breakthroughs, new technologies, increasing levels of integra9on, changing rela9onship between humans and the environment and the frequency of poli9cal conflict all contributed to global developments in which people craOed new understandings of society, culture, and historical interpreta9ons. These new understandings oOen manifested themselves in and were reinforced by new forms of cultural produc9on. Ins9tu9ons of global governance both shaped and adapted to these social condi9ons. PERIOD six 1914 to Today

Transcript of Period 6 Reading Schedule - Joel...

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Key  Concept  6.1    Science  and  the  EnvironmentRapid  advances  in  science  altered  understandings  of  the  universe  and  the  natural  world  and  led  to  the  development  of  new  technologies.  These  changes  enabled  unprecedented  popula9on  growth,  which  altered  how  humans  interacted  with  the  environment  and  threatened  delicate  ecological  balances  at  local,  regional  and  global  levels.

Key  Concept  6.2    Global  Conflicts  and  their  ConsequencesAt  the  beginning  of  the  20th  century,  a  European-­‐dominated  global  poli9cal  order  existed,  which  also  included  the  United  States,  Russia  and  Japan.  Over  the  course  of  the  century,  peoples  and  states  around  the  world  challenged  this  order  in  ways  that  sought  to  redistribute  power  within  the  exis9ng  order  and  restructure  empires,  while  those  people  and  states  in  power  aFempted  to  maintain  the  status  quo.  Other  peoples  and  states  sought  to  overturn  the  poli9cal  order  itself.  These  challenges  to  and  aFempts  to  maintain  the  poli9cal  order  manifested  themselves  in  an  unprecedented  level  of  conflict  with  high  human  casual9es.  In  the  context  of  these  conflicts,  many  regimes  in  both  older  and  newer  states  struggled  with  maintaining  poli9cal  stability  and  were  challenged  by  internal  and  external  factors,  including  ethnic  and  religious  conflicts,  secessionist  movements,  territorial  par99ons,  economic  dependency  and  the  legacies  of  colonialism.

Key  Concept  6.3    New  ConceptualizaCons  of  Global  Economy,  Society,  and  CultureThe  twen9eth  century  witnessed  a  great  deal  of  warfare  and  the  collapse  of  the  global  economy  in  the  1930s.  In  response  to  these  challenges,  the  role  of  the  state  in  the  domes9c  economy  fluctuated  new  ins9tu9ons  of  global  governance  emerged  and  con9nued  to  develop  throughout  the  century.  Scien9fic  breakthroughs,  new  technologies,  increasing  levels  of  integra9on,  changing  rela9onship  between  humans  and  the  environment  and  the  frequency  of  poli9cal  conflict  all  contributed  to  global  developments  in  which  people  craOed  new  understandings  of  society,  culture,  and  historical  interpreta9ons.  These  new  understandings  oOen  manifested  themselves  in  and  were  reinforced  by  new  forms  of  cultural  produc9on.  Ins9tu9ons  of  global  governance  both  shaped  and  adapted  to  these  social  condi9ons.

PERIOD six1914 to Today

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Thursday,  March  2

Stearns  709-­‐721

6.2.IV  A  B  Total  War  and  its  causesMilitary  conflicts  occurred  on  an  unprecedented  global  scale.

• The  First  and  Second  World  Wars  were  the  first  “total  wars.”  Governments  used  ideologies,  including  fascism,  na9onalism,  and  communism,  to  mobilize  all  of  their  state’s  resources,  including  peoples  and  resources  both  in  the  home  countries  and  the  colonies  or  former  colonies.    Governments  also  used  a  variety  of  strategies  to  mobilize  these  popula9ons,  including  poli9cal  speeches,  art,  media,  and  intensified  forms  of  na9onalism.• Gurkha  soldiers  from  India• ANZAC  troops  from  Australia

• The  sources  of  global  conflict  in  the  first  half  of  the  century  varied.• imperialist  expansion  by  European  powers  and  Japan• compe99on  for  resources• economic  crisis  engendered  by  the  Great  Depression

FridayMarch  3

Strayer  1035-­‐1054

6.3.I    A  C  Responses  to  Economic  Challenges  of  20th  Century:    CommunismStates  responded  in  a  variety  of  ways  to  the  economic  challenges  of  the  twen9eth  century.

• In  the  Communist  states  of  the  Soviet  Union  and  China,  governments  directed  the  na9onal  economies  and  oversaw  the  development  of  industry.• Five  Year  Plans• Great  Leap  Forward

• In  newly  independent  states  aOer  World  War  II,  governments  oOen  took  on  a  strong  role  in  guiding  the  economy  to  promote  economic  development.• Nasser’s  promo9on  of  economic  development  in  Egypt• Encouragement  of  export-­‐oriented  economies  in  East  Asia

TuesdayMarch  7

Stearns734-­‐737750-­‐760762-­‐778

6.2.IV  C  D  Cold  War  and  its  proxy  warsMilitary  conflicts  occurred  on  an  unprecedented  global  scale.

• The  global  balance  of  economic  and  poli9cal  power  shiOed  aOer  the  end  of  the  Second  World  War  and  rapidly  evolved  into  the  Cold  War.    The  United  States  and  the  Soviet  Union  emerged  as  superpowers  which  led  to  ideological  struggles  between  capitalism  and  communism  throughout  the  globe.

• The  Cold  War  produced  new  military  alliances,  including  NATO  and  the  Warsaw  Pact  and  promoted  proxy  wars  in  La9n  America,  Africa,  and  Asia.

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ThursdayMarch  9

Strayer  1062-­‐1063

Stearns737-­‐745

6.3.I    B  D  Responses  to  Economic  Challenges  of  20th  Century:    Mixed  economies  and  Liberalism

• At  the  beginning  of  the  century  in  the  United  States  and  parts  of  Europe,  governments  played  a  minimal  role  in  the  na9onal  economy.    With  the  onset  of  the  Great  Depression,  governments  began  to  take  a  more  ac9ve  role  in  the  economy.• The  New  Deal• John  Maynard  Keynes• Fascist  Corpora9st  Economy

• At  the  end  of  the  20th  century,  many  governments  encouraged  free  market  economic  policies  and  promoted  economic  liberaliza9on• USA  under  Ronald  Reagan• Britain  under  Margaret  Thatcher• China  under  Deng  Xiaoping• Chile  under  Pinochet

FridayMarch  10

UN  Universal  Declara.on  of  Human  Rights(Google  it)

6.3.II  A  New  InternaConal  OrganizaConsStates,  communi9es,  and  individuals  became  increasingly  interdependent,  a  process  facilitated  by  the  growth  of  interna9onal  organiza9ons.

• New  interna9onal  organiza9ons  formed  to  maintain  world  peace  and  to  facilitate  interna9onal  coopera9on.• League  of  Na9ons• United  Na9ons

Quiz  over  Period  6  Part  A

Spring BreakSpring Break

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TuesdayMarch  21

Stearns657-­‐669

6.2.II    AnC-­‐Imperialist  movements  led  to  new  statesEmerging  ideologies  of  an9-­‐imperialism  contributed  to  the  dissolu9on  of  empires  and  the  restructuring  of  states.

• Na9onalist  leaders  and  par9es  in  Asia  and  Africa  challenged  imperial  rule.• Indian  Na9onal  Congress• Ho  Chi  Minh• Kwame  Nkrumah

• Regional,  religious,  and  ethnic  movements  challenged  both  colonial  rule  and  inherited  imperial  boundaries.• Muhammad  Ali  Jinnah• Quebecois  separa9st  movement• Biafra  secession  movement

• Transna9onal  movements  sought  to  unite  people  across  na9onal  boundaries.• communism• pan-­‐Arabism• pan-­‐Africanism

• Movements  to  redistribute  land  and  resources  developed  within  states  in  Africa,  Asia,  and  La9n  America,  some9mes  advoca9ng  communism  and  socialism.

Thursday,  March  23

Stearns  721-­‐729830-­‐839

6.2.I    Collapse  of  EmpiresEurope  dominated  the  global  poli9cal  order  at  the  beginning  of  thecentury,  but  both  land-­‐based  and  transoceanic  empires  gave  way  to  new  forms  of  transregional  poli9cal  organiza9on  by  the  century’s  end.

• The  older  land-­‐based  OFoman,  Russian,  and  Qing  Empires  collapsed  due  to  the  combina9on  of  internal  and  external  factors.• poli9cal  and  social  discontent• technological  stagna9on• military  defeat

• Some  colonies  nego9ated  their  independence.• India• Gold  Coast  (Ghana)

• Some  colonies  achieved  independence  through  armed  struggle.• Algeria  from  France• Vietnam  from  France• Angola  from  Portugal

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FridayMarch  24

Stearns663-­‐669794-­‐795

Strayer1090-­‐1097

6.2.III    A  B  Redrawing  of  boundaries,  displacement,  reseXlement,  migraCon  to  metropolePoli9cal  changes  were  accompanied  by  major  demographic  and  social  consequences.

• The  redrawing  of  old  colonial  boundaries  led  to  popula9on  reseFlement.• India/Pakistan  Par99on• Zionist  Jewish  seFlement  of  Pales9ne• division  of  the  Middle  East  into  mandatory  states

• The  migra9on  of  former  colonial  subjects  to  imperial  metropoles  maintained  cultural  and  economic  9es  between  colony  and  metropole  even  aOer  the  dissolu9on  of  empires.• South  Asians  to  Britain• Algerians  to  France• Filipinos  to  the  USA

Tuesday  March  28

Strayer  1097-­‐1109

6.2.V    Use  of  Violence  and  nonviolenceAlthough  conflict  dominated  much  of  the  20th  century,  many  individuals  and  groups  -­‐-­‐  including  states  -­‐-­‐  opposed  this  trend.    Some  individuals  and  groups,  however,  intensified  the  conflicts.

• Groups  and  individuals  challenged  the  many  wars  of  the  century  and  some  promoted  nonviolence  as  a  way  to  bring  about  change.• Picasso’s  Guernica• an9-­‐nuclear  movement  during  the  Cold  War• Thich  Quang  Duc’s  self-­‐immola9on• Mohandas  Gandhi• Dr.  Mar9n  Luther  King  Jr.• Nelson  Mandela

• Groups  and  individuals  opposed  and  promoted  alterna9ves  to  the  exis9ng  economic,  poli9cal,  and  social  orders.• An9-­‐Apartheid  Movement  in  South  Africa• Par9cipants  in  the  global  uprisings  of  1968• The  Tiananmen  Square  democracy  protests  in  China

• Militaries  and  militarized  states  oOen  responded  to  the  prolifera9on  of  conflicts  in  ways  that  further  intensified  conflict.• promo9on  of  military  dictatorship  

• Chile• Spain• Uganda

• buildup  of  the  “military-­‐industrial  complex”• weapons  trading

• More  movements  used  violence  against  civilians  to  achieve  poli9cal  aims.• Irish  Republican  Army  (IRA)• ETA  (Basque  Separa9sts)• Al-­‐Qaeda• ISIS/ISIL

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Thursday    March  30

Stearns850-­‐853

McKay834-­‐837

6.2.III  C    GenocidesPoli9cal  changes  were  accompanied  by  major  demographic  and  social  consequences.

• The  prolifera9on  of  conflicts  led  to  the  Holocaust  during  World  War  II  and  other  forms  of  genocide  and  ethnic  violence.• Armenian  Genocide  in  Turkey  during  and  aOer  World  War  I• Cambodia  during  the  late  1970s• Rwandan  Genocide  in  the  1990s• Ethnic  Cleansing  in  Bosnia  in  the  1990s

Friday      March  31

Strayer  1138-­‐1149

6.3.II  B  InternaConal  Economic  InsCtuCons  and  Trade  AgreementsStates,  communi9es,  and  individuals  became  increasingly  interdependent,  a  process  facilitated  by  the  growth  of  interna9onal  organiza9ons.

• Changing  economic  ins9tu9ons  and  regional  trade  agreements  reflected  the  spread  of  principles  and  prac9ces  associated  with  free-­‐market  economics  throughout  the  world.• interna9onal  economic  ins9tu9ons

• Interna9onal  Monetary  Fund  (IMF)• World  Bank• World  Trade  Organiza9on  (WTO)• mul9na9onal  corpora9ons  (MNC)

• regional  trade  agreements• European  Economic  Community  (EEC)• North  American  Free  Trade  Agreement  (NAFTA)• Associa9on  of  SE  Asian  Na9ons  (ASEAN)• Mercosur  (Argen9na,  Brazil,  Paraguay,  Uruguay)

TuesdayApril  4

Stearns871-­‐874

6.1.II  Environmental  degradaConAs  the  global  popula9on  expanded  at  an  unprecedented  rate,  humans  fundamentally  changed  their  rela9onship  with  the  environment.

• As  human  ac9vity  contributed  to  deforesta9on,  deser9fica9on,  and  increased  consump9on  of  the  world’s  supply  of  fresh  water  and  clean  air,  humans  competed  over  these  and  other  resources  more  intensely  than  ever  before.

• The  release  of  greenhouse  gases  and  other  pollutants  into  the  atmosphere  contributed  to  debates  about  the  nature  and  causes  of  climate  change.

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Thursday    April  6

Stearns801-­‐802

Strayer1162-­‐1169

6.1.I    Green  RevoluCon  and  technological  advancementsResearchers  made  rapid  advances  in  science  that  spread  throughout  the  world,  assisted  by  the  development  of  new  technology.

• New  modes  of  communica9on  and  transporta9on  virtually  eliminated  the  problem  of  geographic  distance.

• The  Green  Revolu+on  produced  food  for  the  earth’s  growing  popula9on  as  it  spread  chemically  and  gene9cally  enhanced  forms  of  agriculture.

• Medical  innova9ons  increased  the  ability  of  humans  to  survive  and  live  longer  lives.• polio  vaccine• ar9ficial  heart

• Energy  technologies  including  the  use  of  oil  and  nuclear  power  raised  produc9vity  and  increased  the  produc9on  of  material  goods.

Friday      April  7

The  Economist  Ar9cle“Bad  Climate  for  Development”

K-­‐Pop  Ar9cles

6.3.II  C  Inequality  caused  by  global  integraCon      States,  communi9es,  and  individuals  became  increasingly  interdependent,  a  process  facilitated  by  the  growth  of  interna9onal  organiza9ons.

• Movements  throughout  the  world  protested  the  inequality  of  environmental  and  economic  consequences  of  global  integra9on• Greenpeace• Green  Belt  Movement  in  Kenya• Earth  Day

6.3  IV    Popular  and  Consumer  Culture  became  global.• Reggae• Bollywood• World  Cup  Soccer• The  Olympics• Rap  Music• Anime• K-­‐Pop

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Tuesday    April  11

Stearns788-­‐790868874-­‐875

Pollard817-­‐826

6.1.III  Demographic  ShiZsDisease,  scien9fic  innova9ons,  and  conflict  led  to  demographic  shiOs.

• Diseases  associated  with  poverty  persisted,  while  other  diseases  emerged  as  new  epidemics  and  threats  to  human  survival.    • 1919  influenza  epidemic• Ebola• HIV/AIDS

• In  addi9on,  changing  lifestyles  and  increase  longevity  led  to  higher  incidence  of  certain  diseases.• diabetes• heart  disease• Alzheimer’s  disease

• More  effec9ve  forms  of  birth  control  gave  women  greater  control  over  fer9lity  and  transformed  sexual  prac9ces.

• Improved  military  technology  and  new  tac9cs  led  to  increased  levels  of  war9me  casual9es.• technologies:    tanks,  airplanes,  atomic  bomb• tac9cs:    trench  warfare,  guerrilla  warfare,  terrorism,  firebombing• examples:    Nanjing,  Dresden,  Hiroshima  &  Nagasaki

Thursday    April  13

Strayer1149-­‐1163

Stearns776-­‐777

6.3.III  Race,  Class,  &  Gender  IssuesStates,  communi9es,  and  individuals  became  increasingly  interdependent,  a  process  facilitated  by  the  growth  of  interna9onal  organiza9ons.

• People  conceptualized  society  and  culture  in  new  ways;  rights-­‐based  discourses  challenged  old  assump9ons  about  race,  class,  gender,  and  religion.    In  much  of  the  world,  access  to  educa9on,  as  well  as  par9cipa9on  in  new  poli9cal  and  professional  roles,  became  more  inclusive  in  terms  of  race,  class,  and  gender.• right  to  vote  and  hold  public  office  granted  to  women

• 1920  USA• 1932  Brazil• 1934  Turkey• 1945  Japan• 1947  India• 1963  Morocco

• rise  in  female  literacy• increased  numbers  of  women  in  higher  educa9on• US  Civil  Rights  Act  of  1965• end  of  Apartheid  in  South  Africa• Caste  and  reserva9on  in  the  Indian  Cons9tu9on  of  1949• UN  Declara9on  of  Human  Rights• Global  feminist  movements• Negritude  Movement• Libera9on  Theology  in  La9n  America• Islamic  Renewal  Movements  in  Egypt  and  Saudi  Arabia

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Good FridayGood Friday

Tuesday    April  18 Period Six Test

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HappyEaster!

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AP World HistoryExam

May 11 8:00 am