Erik
Manarino
Outline Chapter 32 & 33
Chapter 32:
I. The changing political climate
- With
this new developing world people in Singapore, Bolivia, and Nigeria now had to flock to the cities to find a
job. Thousands squished into the cities to work and find jobs. Some
people flourished materially while others lived in poverty.
- “Since
1945, the world has change rapidly. More than 100 nations won
independence as a result of the breakup of western colonial
empires.” Technology during this time was superior to what it has
ever been and the population of the world at this time was constantly
going up.
- As
time goes on we will have a greater idea about what the collapse of the Soviet Union and the freeing of many small countries will
have on the world. In this chapter we will learn about what recent effects
the war has had on smaller countries.
A.
The Great Liberation
- In
1972, President Julius Nyerere
of Tanzia spoke of the
hardships facing a new nation. “There is a world movement now against
being pushed around… This movement will succeed.”
- In
the 1930s Nationalistic movements had taken place in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. After WWII, leaders like Gandhi in India insisted on Independence. At first many imperialistic countries
tried to hold on to their power however they eventually had to give in.
- In
total over 100 countries emerged in this “great liberation.” Some
countries were big like India and others were small like Nepal. These new nations became known as
the developing world.
B.
The Cold War goes Global
·
The new nations emerged into the Cold War divided between the United States and capitalism or the Soviet Union and socialism. Many nations trusted the US and accepted Capitalism as an economy, because they
were ruled by Westerners.
·
To avoid super power rivalries many nations became nonaligned. Nonaligned
means to be on neither side of the war. The purpose of this movement was to
reduce world tensions and promote economic policies that would benefit
developing nations.
·
Within may nations including Russia and Rwanda ethnic groups pushed for autonomy or
independence. They wanted their own states to protect their
identity. Often economic or political struggles were at the root of
ethnic clashes.
C.
New Nations seek Stability
- Many
nations had high hopes for the future. For example, in Africa many countries were mixed together with different languages,
religions, and ethnic identities. Colonial powers often used a
“divide and conquer” that almost always divided ethical rivalries.
- The
new nations wrote constitutions modeling those of the western
democracies. However after a while only a few like India were able to sustain. This is because post
war leaders did nothing to prepare their former colonies for independence.
- So
with this unprepared nation, with no political policies or ideas, people
went into chaos. Eventually a
modern westernized educated elite took over, leaving the
majority poor.
D.
The Shrinking Globe
- Since
1945, transportation and communications systems in the world have been
more so interdependent. Interdependence is the dependence of
countries on goods, recourses, and knowledge from other parts of the
world.
- The
UN stands for the United Nations. The UN provides services for
millions of people worldwide. The UN also played a big role in
decolonization
- The
World Heath Organization or the WHO helps out countries throughout the
world. It works with other groups to wipe out small pox and to find
cures for diseases.
E.
Enduring Issues
- Many
countries pose a challenge to World Peace. This has been a problem
ever since the US dropped the atomic bomb. The atomic bomb
was dropped in 1945.
- Since
the 1960s the world has seen a dangerous growth of terrorists.
Terrorism is the deliberate act of random violence against civilians, to
exact revenge and to get political goals.
- In
1948 the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was wrote and improved by
the UN. This document goes into saying that “All humans are born
free and equal….”
II. Global economic trends
- In
1969 Pope Paul 4th stated that he saw both great achievements
and problems in the modern age. “Ours is a time of problems, of gigantic
problems…”
- As
new nations became independence they aspired to a new standard of living
in the industrial world. Since the 1950s, however, a growth has
emerged between the rich and poor.
- However
with every nation that has industrialized and has made money, there is always lots more that
didn’t make it. In today’s world the stories of these countries are
closely linked.
A.
The global north and south: two worlds of development
- The
cold war split the world into two different parts, the communist East and
the capitalist West. Today an economic gulf divides the two nations.
Relatively rich nations and extremely poor ones.
- The
global North has the rich nations. It includes industrial nations like Western Europe, North
America, and Japan and Australia. Most are located in the temperature zone
north of the equator.
- The
global south refers to the developing nations. Most of these nations
lie in Asia, Africa, and Latin America
in between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. However some nations have
natural resources such as oil and diamonds.
B.
Economic Interdependence
- A
multinational corporation is one with branches in many countries. It
is one that invests in the developing world. These companies bring aid and
technology to other countries.
- As
many nations are interdependent if one nation suffers a lost than all
nations can be affected by it. An example of this is in the 1970s
when all nations suffered a loss of gasoline.
- The
debt crisis can be solved by debt nations and the use of privatization.
Privatization is the selling off of state owned industries to private
investors.
C.
Obstacles to Development
- In
parts of Africa it is nearly impossible to industrialize.
There are little or no natural resources and therefore no money is made
for the nation. Also uncertain climate often makes it dangerous to
civilize there.
- Population
and poverty also lead to an obstacle. Too many people can make labor
cheap and death rates can increase. With all of these people
urbanization is usually really crowded and environments are bad.
- Civil
Wars and other struggles prevented economic development. Nations are
torn by war and often tribes don’t want to cooperate with each
other. As military dictators would rather spend money on the
military then on much need food, education, and clothing.
D.
Economic development and the environment
- The
forests and the environment are being attacked and thus causing pollution
and deforestation. This has only recently been a problem because
before the population was low and technology was simple.
- In
the 1970s conservationists grew worried that this stripping away of land
and trees would cause damage. For example, gases from power plants
and factories produce acid rain.
- Acid
rain is a form of pollution in which toxic chemicals in the air come back
to the Earth as rain, snow, or hail. Acid Rain and harm
forests, lakes and farmland, especially in North America.
III. Changing patters of life
- In recent decades, hundreds of millions of people have migrated
from rural areas to urban centers and cities. This causes
urbanization and the crowding of cities.
- For many, this is something totally different from what they were
used to living on the farms. For example the Vietnamese poet Nguyen Sa
wrote:
- “I must get far away from this city with its soot-stricken curbs
and people pass each other of a Monday morning without a smile or
word…” Urbanization has transformed the people just like in Europe.
A.
The Village Continuity and Change
- The village is a close-set of houses made of stones, clay bricks,
or stacks with plastered mud and other natural things. These
villages don’t really exist anymore. People now live in crowded
cities.
- Many villages have stayed the same even after urbanization, with
some changes. For example, electricity was added and now more movies
halls are seen. Iron ore is now shipped on a paved road, etc.
- However, village people still make up a majority of the people on
earth. About 3.3 billion out of the 5.7 billion. Most of them
live in the poor south. Life varies by climate region and by resources.
B.
Old Ways and New
- In today’s western world modernization began more than 200 years
ago. Since 1945 the rest of the world has experienced similar upturns.
Urbanization is one way people have tried to get out of poverty.
- In the cities, people adopted western fashions and ideas. During
the Age of Imperialism, westernization was thought of as the
superiors. Even after independence they used Westerners as a model.
In Latin America, some Roman Catholic clergy adopted a movement called
liberation theology. This was when people urged the church to take a more
active role in opposing the social conditions attributed to poverty.
C.
New Rights and Roles for Women
- In
early 1945, women were beginning to enter the men’s world. In the UN
a charter was set up saying that it would strive for “equal rights for men
and women”.
- In
the Western world, like Europe and the United States, women were making great advances in the work
place. No longer would women get sexually harassed on the phone, or
get paid less for the same job. Women starting in the 1970s could
move into such high paying positions as astronauts, scientists, and
executives.
- Interesting
enough women in the developing world were doing much of the same
thing. Women supported nationalism and helped to improve the
conditions for women and their social status.
D.
Science and Technology
- Technology
has actually shrunken the globe. People can reach destinations that
would usually take months to get to, in a matter of hours. One can
reach someone by cell phone, instead of by letter or by telegraph.
- Among
the most frequently used and useful inventions is the computer. The
computer is the basis for almost anything we do nowadays.
Governments run the country on them and individuals use them to conduct
business.
- Besides
this great advancement in technology medicine has also had many great
breakthroughs. Antibiotics were developed as well as vaccines that could
wipe out many diseases like smallpox. However new diseases like AIDS
is and Ebola will face new challenges for scientists in the future.
E.
A New International Culture
- With these new technologies, like the radio and computers, small
villages that usually didn’t hear or care about anything, started to
develop their own feelings and opinions. With these new technologies
people were able to communicate more freely and easily.
- Since WWII, America’s culture full of food, clothes, and music has
had an influence on the world. American shows are being broadcast in such
places as Moscow, Beijing, and Cairo.
- In the Arts, too, influence is everywhere. In Europe for example, people were copying Turkish carpets and Chinese
pottery. A century later Europe copied
Japanese copying ideas, spreading more influence.
F.
Looking Ahead
- “Many
current trends and issues emerged long before 1945 and will continue
beyond the year 2000.” In the next few years after the year 2000 new
conflicts will appear and new problems will arise.
- In
the next few years coming up, there will be major controversies
arising. Including two contrasting trends that are shaping the
world.
- “Nationalism
is on the rise. Yet global interdependence has become an inescapable
fact of life. In many nations and regions, people must reconcile
with local and global interests.”
Chapter 33:
I. The Western World: An Overview:
- “Western Europe rebounded out of the rubble of World War
II. During the postwar years, standards of living rose
dramatically.” People could afford to go out and get better jobs and
improve their lifestyles.
- Standards of living grew because people started to make more
money. With this new money people invested their homes with ventral
heating and running water.
- Before this time, any of these luxuries were unheard of.
With these new comforts, many other changes were made in the Western
World.
A.
The Cold War in Europe
- For
more than 40 years, the Cold War divided Europe into two hostile military alliances. The Communists of Eastern
Europe ruled by the soviets and the western democracies, led by the US and NATO.
- The
Berlin Wall was the center of focus during the Cold War. It was a
bitter divider during the Cold War. West Berlin became a show case for Germany and East Berlin
became communistic.
- In
the 1970s, Americans and Soviet leaders promoted an era of Détente or
relaxation of tensions. This brought new arguments that wished to
reduce the nuclear arm race.
B.
Recovery and Growth in Western Europe
- The Marshal aid
plan, let countries easily recover from WWI. It allowed people to rebuild
industries, farms, and transportation networks destroyed by the war.
As a result the economy in the 1950s boomed.
- Welfare state is defined as a system whose “government keeps most
features of a capitalistic economy but takes greater responsibility for
the social and economic needs of its people.” For example, Germany and Britain banned child labor, regulated mine safety, and
set up public schools.
- In 1973, the West suffered an economic jolt when OPEC cut oil
production and raised prices. Since most Western countries used oil
to fuel industries the higher prices hurt their economy.
C.
Towards European Unity
- In 1957, the same six nations signed a treaty to form the EC or
European Community. The six nations were France, West Germany, Belgium, Italy, and Netherlands, and Luxembourg.
- The EC gradually ended tariffs and taxes, and allowed labor and
capital to move freely across neighboring countries. Although a few
fights did occur between nations, most of the time the EC flourished.
- By 1990 the EC wanted one currency for the same area.
However some countries thought that this was a bad idea, because it would
make the countries not as strong and they would lose their identity.
However eventually the Euro war released.
D.
Social Trends
- Social changes were at a high in 1945. Class lines were not
as defined and prosperity spread. For most of western history, only
a few held power and wealth, but now their came a middle class.
- With the money more spread out, more kids were encouraged to go to
college. Families bought cars and houses. Although the poor
were still the majority, most people had more opportunities than that of
earlier times.
- Women in Europe and North America
have made progress towards legal and economical equality. A larger
and growing number of women now worked outside the home. However
there was still the “glass ceiling”, an invisible and imaginative barrier
which separates women from the top jobs.
II. The Western Europe Democracies:
- In July 1994 in the Tour de France bicyclist for the first time
got to race through the Channel Tunnel. This Channel Tunnel was
shortened up to the name, Chunnel. This was the 1st time
since the ice age a land rout linked Britain to the continental Europe.
- One man stated that this Chunnel was “about the future.”
This Chunnel increased Britain’s involvement in European matters and made ties
between Britain and other European nations stronger.
- “After 1945, the Western European democracies operated within a
growing framework of regional and global cooperation.” This
cooperation included the Common Mark, NATO, and the UN. However each
nation still had its own contribution to postwar freedom and prosperity.
A.
Britain: Government and the Economy
- After
WWII and the bombings that tore it apart, Britain was in bad shape. So in 1945 voters put
the Labour party in
power. The war had helped to build a new attitude towards the
working class.
- In
1979, Britain like the rest of Europe was suffering hard economic times. Therefore welfare had to
be cut back saying that it was costly and ineffective. During 11
years as Britain Prime Minister Thatcher, helped to promote individual
initiative.
- Ireland won independence in 1922. However Britain still had control of other 6 northern
countries. Anyway, a bitter rivalry between Catholics and
Protestants existed debating whether or not they should be independent.
B.
France: Revival and Prosperity
- Like Britain France was also hard hit by WWII. The French Republic set up in 1946 hoping to renew confidence.
However it didn’t succeed, because of heavy critics from both
conservationists and communists.
- General Charles de Gaulle set up the Fifth French Republic. As the president he was given great power, and
with this power he decided that the Algeria had to be let go.
- De Gaulle also worked to unite the French and to restore their
prestige and power. He made to new with West Germany, and developed a nuclear force to challenge that
of the Americans.
C.
Germany: Reunited at Last
- If you thought Britain and France were bad, Germany was worst. There were “no homes, no shops,
no transportation, no government buildings, only a few walls”.
People were starving and dieing in a landscape of nothingness.
- In 1949 Germany was split into two West and East. The West
Germans decided to join the Western World while Eastern Germany joined the Soviets. After a while the
countries wanted to combine, however the Soviets forbade it.
- As the Cold War started, the United States rushed into West Germany to stop it from being invaded by the communists.
With this Germany’s economic miracle happened.
D.
Other Democratic Nations of the West
- Many nations like Norway, Sweden, and Denmark created extreme socialistic welfare
programs. In Italy, the North greatly prospered with its industries
whiles the south, and it’s largely peasant population starved.
- Italy however was not stable because of its multi
party system. The Italian communist party was strong, but it never
got enough votes to become a majority. Corruption and financial
scandals also took hold of Italy politically.
- In 1945, countries were lagging behind like Spain, Portugal, and Greece. These countries had large peasant
populations and lacked in any real industrial advancements.
III. North
American Prosperity:
- “Let every nation know that we shall pay any price, bear any
burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure
the survival of survive and the success of liberty.”
- This statement was made by JFK. (JFK is president John F.
Kennedy) This was his promise and vow he made as president in
1961.
- “In the postwar era, the United States sough out to contain communism, extend liberty
and civil rights, and to ensure economic prosperity.” To our North, Canada also built democracy and prosperity.
- The United States and the Cold War
- In 1945 the United States had the strongest military power. It was
also the world’s only country with an atomic bomb. However the US still felt threatened by communist expansion,
because they were developing their own atomic bomb too.
- “The United States built bases overseas and organized military
alliances from Europe to Southeast Asia.”
During the Cold War the US used this to its advantage as well as used its
economic forces.
- In the years 1950 to 1954, the United States was paranoid that communists had put spies into
the US. Especially a man named Joseph McCarthy,
who ruined the reputations and careers of thousands.
- Economy and the Role of Government
- Unlink all of Europe after WWII; the United States had no major damage to any of its cities.
This gave the US a huge upper hand in because there had to be no
rebuilding.
- With this in mind the US provided more than 50% of the world’s
manufactured goods. At the same time, the Cold War was looming and
opening up jobs. By the 1950s, the American Economy was
booming.
- A deficit is “the gap between what a government spends and what it
takes in through taxes and other sources.” With this deficit many
people became concerned saying that money had to be cut from some areas
and transferred to others.
- The Civil Rights Movement
- The 1950s seemed like a peaceful time at home for the United States, but a few major changes were underway that
would eventually reshape the American society. Among these movements
was the Civil Rights Movement.
- This Civil Rights Movement was about blacks or African Americans
and their rights to liberty. Segregation was the separating of white
from blacks and in many places like the south, it was very common.
Blacks faced job discrimination and not being able to vote.
- However, with time Congress eventually passed laws outlawing
segregation and publicly saying that it was in fact inhumane. Despite this
new law set up in Congress, many blacks still faced prejudice in jobs and
at restaurants.
- The United States and the Global Economy
- “In
postwar decades the United States greatly profited from the growing global
economy.” However, interdependence also brought problems. For
example, in 1970 and the OPEC price hikes on gas…
- With
these increases in gas, it proved how dependent on the import of gas from
imported oil. This inflation of the prices helped Third World countries into further debt, which killed
American banks.
- But
this did not stop the United States of America, people still continued to flock to live
there. Unlike the immigrants from the 1800s and early 1900s these
new immigrants came from Latin
America and Asia.
- Postwar Canada
- Canada, like the United States, is a nation shaped by immigrants. Canada, after gaining its independence, no longer
depended as much on Britain but still did have economic ties.
- Canada also like the US had a period of economic boom after the
war. This was due to the oil and gas deposits found in the western
providence. In 1959 Canada and the US opened the St. Lawrence Seaway.
- Canada and the US are close, but some think that they are too
close. Some are mad that the US cultural domination has tore apart their
own. Economic rivalries have also been a big problem.
IV. The Soviet Union: Rise and Fall of a Superpower:
- “We shall bury you” Soviet leader Nikita Krushchev told the West during the cold
war. His statement was not, he later explained a “military
threat”.
- “Rather, he believed that capitalism was doomed and Soviet
Communism was the way of the future.” In the movie The Majestic Jim
Carrey, plays a character hunted down by the police for be a communist.
- “Khrushchev’s prediction never came true. Instead, in the
1980s, the Soviet economy began to crumble. Efforts at reform
led the Soviet empire to disintegrate with stunning speed.”
A.
Stalin’s Successors
- The Soviet Union like the US emerged from the War stronger than ever.
Stalin forges a Soviet Sphere of influence from Baltic to the Balkans.
“Victory, however, brought few rewards to the Soviet people.”
- Nikita Khrushchev was next in line for Soviet power, and he did so
aggressively public saying that Stalin had abused his powers. He
then pursued a policy of de-Stalinization. He freed many prisoners
and eased censorship.
- Later in 1964, economic and foreign policy booted Khrushchev’s
from office. A dissident is one who talks out against the government
like Khrushchev did.
B.
The Soviet Economy
- “After the war, Stalin rebuilt shattered Soviet industries, using
factories and other equipment stripped from Germany.” As in the 1930s Stalin had his
successors focus on heavy industries, such as steel and coal.
- In 1957, the Soviets launched Sputnik I, the first
artificial satellite to orbit the earth. This was great propaganda
against the West. Also for Soviets, bread was cheap, rent was low,
parents had jobs, and children were watched and cared for.
- Out of the two successors of Stalin neither of them could solve
the Soviet’s economic problems. The state-run industry had no
problem making steel and coal, yet it could still not produce enough meal
and grain to feed its population.
C.
Foreign Policy Issues
- “In 1955, Khrushchev set up the Warsaw Pact, in theory to defend
the communist’s bloc against NATO.” Like the United States the Soviets helped the countries that emerged
from colonial rule.
- The Soviet-American relationship swung back and fourth between
confrontation and détente. In 1961, the building of the Berlin wall helped to fuel the tensions of the Cold
War.
- A year later in 1962 Khrushchev tried to build a nuclear missile
base in Cuba. This triggered the CMS of Cuban Missile
Crisis. This is the Nuclear
war that everyone feared would come.
D.
Collapse of the Soviet Empire
- A glasnost is openness. Gorbachev launched a two step plan
that asked that one of these two steps be glasnost. This stated that
the public need to know the countries problems and that censorship needed
to end.
- The other one would be perestroika. This is the
restructuring of the government and the economy. Making the government
more open and less secretive, he hoped would increase output.
- But these changes only brought economical turmoil. Shortages
grew worst and prices shot up. Factories that didn’t have the
government’s support closed leaving thousands jobless.
E.
The Russian Republic
- “Russia the largest republic in size and population, had
dominated the Soviet
Union.” Because it was
a republic Russia approved a new constitution that had no
democratic traditions.
- But in the 1990s economic hardships and political turmoil
increased. Many Russians feared the growing chaos and longed for the
old way of order. But others disagreed, saying that it was better
than the old way and that things would eventually get better.
- “Russia reduced its nuclear stockpile after the breakup
of the Soviet Union.” But it still had a huge arsenal of
weapons that could be used to determine the fate of the rest of the world.
F.
The Other Republics
- Like Russia, the other former Soviets wanted independence
and to build a stable government. They wanted to experience what the
US had and to pursue a better standard of living.
- These countries faced up rest and divisions between the
pro-communists and pro-democracy groups. Ethnic violence erupted in
republics that included a mix of national groups.
- Mini civil wars broke out between nations over territory
control. “For example, Armenia tried to seize a small area in neighboring Azerbaijan, where many Armenians lived.
V.
A New Era in Eastern Europe:
- “For centuries the peoples of Eastern Europe lived in the shadow of larger powers.
Before 1914 most of the regions were divided up among the old German, Russia, Austrian, and the Ottoman Empire.”
- After WWI many small nations gained independence. “Finally
in 1989, Eastern Europe nations again won independence.” “Independence is not just a state of being. It is a
task.”
- “We must… ensure that it will not merely be a new burden but that,
on the contrary, it will bring benefits to all of its citizens…” this is
stated by Valcav Havel, a playwright and the
first president of the Czech Republic.
A.
In the Soviet Orbit
·
“In 1945, Soviet armies occupied much of Eastern Europe. Backed by Soviet power, local Communist
parties from Hungary to Bulgaria destroyed rival parties, silenced critics, censored
press, and campaigned against rebellion”.
·
As the Cold War went on, the Soviet
Union tightened its grip on
its Satellites. More than 30 divisions of Soviets were stationed throughout Eastern Europe.
· “But in East Germany, Poland, Hungary and else where
unrest simmered.”
Some people still resented the communist monopoly, and nationalists resented Moscow’s domination.
B.
Poland’s
Struggle Towards Democracy
- Poland was the Soviet Union’s most troublesome Satellite. Poland wanted greater freedom with the Soviet
bloc. But this only made matters worst, Stalin crushed Poland and any uprising it might have been tempting.
- In 1980, economic hardships ignited strikes of shipyard
worker. These workers in the port of Gdansk, led by Lech
Walesa, organized an
independent trade union called Solidarity.
- In the late 1980s, Gorbachev declared he would not interfere in Eastern Europe. By then Poland was introduced radical Economical changes.
Solidarity, sponsored
the first free election in 50 years.
C.
Revolution and Freedom
- “By the late 1989, a ‘democracy movement’ was sweeping Eastern Europe. Everywhere, people took to the streets
demanding reform. One by one, communist governments fell.”
- Thankfully most of these communistic to democratic changes came
peacefully. Only Romania’s brutal dictator, Ceausescu, refused to step
down. He was then overthrown and executed.
- For the first time in 1945, Easter Europe was able to settle their own affairs. All
of these countries withdrew from the Warsaw pact and asked that the Soviet troops
leave. By then Soviet power was coming to an end anyway.
D.
War Comes to Sarajevo
- Sarajevo was part of Yugoslavia. Its three main ethnic groups consisted of
Croats, who were Roman Catholics, Serbs, who were Orthodox Christians, and
the Muslims.
- These groups lived peacefully by each other with no problem,
because they each had their own cultural cities, and they all spoke the
same language. But after Tito’s dead and the fall of communism, a wave of
nationalism tore these nations apart.
- Bosnia became independent and was divided.
Muslims made up the majority, but there were also many Serbs and
Croats. Bosnian Serbs got money and arms from nearby Serbia.
E.
Looking Ahead
- “In 1995 the United States finally brought the warring parties to Dayton, Ohio. Here they hammered out a series of
arguments, called the Daytona Accords.”
- NATO forces were sent to Bosnia to implement the agreements. Progress in
making the agreement work was slow and often unsatisfactory to one of the
three groups.
- In the 1990s Bosnia became a test case for the US in post-war years. The UN forces tried but
failed to restore peace, but as Serbs followed things looked bad and
eventually a temporary peace was reached.