Wednesday, April 20, 2016

chapter 23 and visual source

Growth Instability and Inequality
The impact of these economic links has a prompted enormous debate and controversy. Amid the swirl of contending opinion one thing that seemed reasonably clear was economic globalization accompanied and arguably helped generate the most remarkable court of economic growth in world history. On a global level, total world output grew from a value of $7 trillion in 1950 to $73 trillion in 2009 and on a per capita basis from $2,652 to $10,728. This represents an immense rapid and unprecedented creation of wealth with a demonstrable impact on human welfare. Life expectancies expanded almost everywhere infant mortality declined and literacy increased.
Far more problematic have been the instability of this emerging world economy and the distribution of the wealth it has generated. Amid overall economic growth peridics crises and setbacks have shaped recent world history. Soaring oil prices contributed to a severe stock market each in 1973-1974 and great hardship for many developing countries.
But nothing since the great depression more clearly illustrated the unsettling consequences of global connectedness in the absence of global regulations than the old wide economic contractions that begin in 2008. An inflated housing market or bulb in the U.S. collapsed triggering millions home foreclosures growing unemployment the tightening of credit and declining consumers spending. Soon this will rippled around the world and Iceland rapidly growing economy collapsed almost overnight as three major banks failed the countrys' stock market dropped by 80% and its currency lost more than 70% of its value all in a single week. In Africa reduced demand for exports threatened to halt a promising decade of economic progress. Sierra Leone for example some 90% of the country's diamond mine workers lost their jobs. The slowing of China's booming economy led up to unemployment for one in seven of the country's urban migrants forcing them to return to already overcrowded rural eras.

Visual source 23.1
Globalization has bound the various peoples of the planet more tightly together and in some respects has made us more alike. Almost all of us for example live in a nation state and see the health wealth and prosperity that modern science and technology promise. And there are other ways we are different divided and conflicted. There is a big gap between wealth and the rich countries of the global recent rift in the human community.
The experiences of globalization for some peoples living in Asia, Africa etc has been that of working in foreign owned productions facilities. Companies in wealthier countries have often found it advantages to build such facilities in places where labor is less expensive or environmental regulations are less restrictive. The worst in them in terms is child labor low pay few benefits and dangerous working conditions have been sweatshops. Abuses generated an international movement challenging those conditions.

Monday, April 18, 2016

chapter 22 documents

progress islam- In the early 21st century Osama bin Laden, whose al-Qaeda organization launched the attacks on the U.S. on September 11, 2001 and called for the overthrow of compromised governments in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the Islamic world. A lot of Muslims shared a bin Laden's outage at the sorry state of many Muslim societies as well as his opposition to heavy U.S. backing for the state of Israel and to American military interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Bin Laden and his followers were certainly not the only voices laying claim to Islam in the aftermath of 9/11. All across the Islamic world others argues that Muslims could retain their distinctive religious sensibility while embracing democracy women rights technological progress freedom of thought and religious pluralism. Thinkers were following the tradition of the 19th century Islamic modernism even as they recalled earlier centuries of Islamic intellectual and scientific achievement and religious tolerance.

Abandoning islam
Most muslims has been evolution of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali immigrant to the Netherlands and later to the U.S. who repudiated much of her Somali culture and Islamic faith. She was born in 1969, she was the daughter of a prominent political opponent of the Somali government. Fleeing the country with her family, she spent much of her childhood in Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, and Kenya where she was attracted for a time to a strict form of Islam. As a teenager she was willingly wore a hijab the traditional covering often prescribed for muslim women. Later in 1992 she had an arranged marriage to a man she regarded as a bigot and an idiot and found political asylum in the Netherlands. She was disowned  by her father. In the Netherlands she flourished moving from work as a cleaner to the of a translator in a refugee center and obtaining a masters degree in the process.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

chapter 22

All across the world efforts to crate political order had to contend with a set of common conditions. Populations were exploding and expectations for independence ran very high often exceeding the available resources. Many developing countries were culturally very diverse with a little loyalty to the central state. Nonetheless public employment mushroomed as the state assumed greater responsibility for economic development. In some conditions of widespread poverty and weak private economies groups and individuals sought to capture the state or part of it both for the salaries and status it offered and for the opportunities for private enrichment that public office provide. This was for setting in which developing countries had to hammer out the new political system. 
As conical rule drew to a close European authorities in many places attempted to transplant democratic institutions to colonies they had long governed with such a have and authoritarian hand. They established legislatures, permitted elections allowed political parties to operate and in general anticipated the development of constitutional parliamentary similar to there own. It was in India that such a policy system established its deepest roots. There Western style democracy including regular elections multiple parties and peaceful changes in the government has been practice almost continuously since independence. But the struggle for independence in India had been a prolonged affair thus providing time for an Indian political leadership to sort itself out. The British began to hand over power in a gradual way well before complete independence was granted in 1947. A large number of Indians had useful administrative to technical skills than was the case elsewhere. 
Elsewhere in the colonial world democracy proved a far more fragile transplant. Among the new state of Africa for example a few retained their democratic institutions beyond the initial post independence decade. Many of the apparently popular political parties that had led the struggle for independence lost mass support and were swept away by military. 

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

chapter 21 and documents

Russia: Revolution in a single year
The communists in Russia , communists came to power back o the revolutionary upheaval that took place within a single year in 1917. The immense pressures of the world war 1 which was going very badly for the Russians, represented the catalyst for that the revolution as the accumulated tensions of Russian society exploded. Much exploited and suffering from wartime shortage, workers men and women alike took to the stets to express their outrage at the incompetence and privileges of the elites. In St. Petersburg, some of 100,000 wives of soldiers demonstrated for bread and peace. Activists from various parties many of them socialist recruited members organized demonstrations, published newspapers and plotted revolutions. By February in 1917 Tsar Nicholas II had lost almost support and was forced to abdicate the throne thus ending the Romanov dynasty, which had ruled Russia for more than three centuries.
This was the social revolution and it quickly demonstrated the inadequacy of the provisional government which had come to power after the tsar abdicated. Consisting of middle class politicians and some moderate socialist leaders that government was divided and ineffectual unable or unwilling to meet the demands of Russia's revolutionary masses. Now it was willing to take Russia out of the war as many were now demanding. Impatience and outrage against the provisional government provided an opening for more radical groups. The most effective were the Bolsheviks a small socialist party with a determined and charismatic leader, Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, more commonly known as Lenin. He had long believed that Russia despite its industrial backwardness was nonetheless ready for a socials revolution that would he expect spark further revolutions in the more developed countries of Europe.
During the civil war 1918-1921 the Bolshevik harshly regimented the economy seized grain from angry peasants suppressed nationalist rebellions and perpetrated bloody atrocities as did their enemies as well. But they also integrated many lower class men into the Red Army, as Bolshevik military forces were known and into new local government providing them a fresh avenue of social mobility. By battling foreign troops, the Bolsheviks claimed to be defending Russia from imperialist and protecting the downtrodden masses from their exploiters.
Living through collectivization-
For Russian peasants and the of other nationalities as well the chief experience of Stalinism was collectivization, the enforce brining together of many small scale family farms into a much bigger larger collective farms called kolkhozy. Thus the private ownership of land was largely ended, except for some small plots which peasants could till individually. That process generally began with arrival of outside agitators or community party officials who sought to persuade or necessary to force the villages to enter the kolhoz. They divided peasants into class categories rich peasants were to be excluded from the collective farms as incipient capitalist poor and middle peasants were expected to join.

Monday, April 4, 2016

chapter 20 and documents

The great depression
The most influential change of the postwar decades lay in the great depression. If world war 1 represented the political collapse of Europe this catastrophic downturn suggested that western capitalism was likewise failing. During the nineteenth century that economic system had spurred the most substantial economic growth in the world history and had raised the living standards of millions but to many people it was a troubling system. Never had the flaws of capitalism been so evident or so devastating as during the decade that followed the outbreak of the great depression in 1929. All across the Euro- America this economic system seemed to unravel.  On the day that the American stock market initially crashed eleven wall street financiers committed suicide some by jumping out of skyscrapers. Banks closed and many people lost their life savings. Investment dried up world trade dropped by 62% within a few years and businesses contracted when they were unable to sell their products. For ordinary people the worst feature of the great depression was the lost of work. Unemployment soared everywhere and in both Germany and the U.S. it reached 30% or more by the 1932. It spreader from the Americas to Europe and beyond and its continuation for a decade has been complicated economy during the 1920s. In a country untouched by the Great Wa, wartime demand gad greatly stimulated agricultural and industrial capacity. Ending of 1920s its farms and factories were producing more goods than could be sold because of the highly unequal distribution of income meant that many people could not afford to buy the products that American factories were churning out.
The great depression also sharply challenged the government of industrialized capitalist countries which generally  had believed that the economy would regulate itself through the market. The markets apparent failure to self correct led many people to look twice at the Soviet Union. There the dispossession of the propertied classes and a state controlled economy had generated an impressive economic growth with almost unemployment in the 1930s even as the capitalist world reeling.

Nation and Race
There are some truths which are obvious the for this reason are not seen or at least not recognized by ordinary people. Every animal mates only with a member of the same species. Any crossing of two being not at exactly the same level produced a medium between the level of the two parents.

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

chapter 19 and documents

The failure of conservative modernization
Chinese authorities were not passive in the face of their countries mounting crises, both internal and external. Known as self strengthening their policies during the 1860s and 1870s to a traditional china while borrowing cautiously from the west. An overhauled examination system designed to recruit qualifies candidates for official positions sought the good men who could cope with the massive reconstruction that china faced i the wake of the taiping rebellion. Support for landlords and the repair of dikes and irrigation helped restore rural social and economics order. A few industrial factories producing textiles and steel were established coal mines were expanded and telegraph system was initiated. One Chinese general in the 1863 confessed his humiliation that the "Chinese weapons are far inferior to those of foreign counties". A number of modern arsenals, shippers and foreign language schools sought to remedy this deficiency.

The general failures of self strengthening became apparent at the end of the century when an anti foreign movement known as the boxer uprising erupted in the northern china.  It was led by militia organizations calling themselves the society of fighters and harmonious fists the boxers killed numerous europeans and Chinese christians and laid siege to the foreign embassies in Beijing.
The growing numbers of educated Chinese including many official elite positions became highly disillusioned with the Qing dynasty which was both foreign and ineffective in protecting china. By the late 1890s such people were organizing a variety of clubs study groups and newspapers to examine chinas desperate situation and to explore alternative paths. The names of these organizations reflect their outlook the national rejuvenation study society, society to protect the nation, and understand the national shame society. They believed that a truly unified nation in which rulers and ruled were closely related could dave china from dismemberment at the hands of foreign imperialists.

The sick man of Europe
In 1750 the Ottoman Empire was still the central political fixture of a widespread islamic world. From its Turkish heartland in Anatolia it ruled over much of the Arab world, from which Islam had come. It protected pilgrims on their way to Mecca governed Egypt and coastal North Africa, and incorporated millions of christians in the Balkans. The Ottoman Empires own domains shrank considerably at the hands of Russia British, and the French. In 1798 napoleons invasions of Egypt which had long been a province of the Ottoman Empire was early stunning blow.

Edict on Education
Our scholars are now without solid and practical education our artisan are without scientific instructors when compared with other countries. We soon see hoe weak we are. Does anyone think that our troops are as well drilled or as well led as those of the foreign armies? Or that we can successfully stand against them? Changes must be made to accord with the necessities of the time. Keeping in mind the morals of the sages and wise men we must them the basis on which to build newer and better structures.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

chapter 18 879. documents 922

Comparing colonial economies
Colonial rule affected the lives if its subject people in many ways but the most pronounced change was in their ways of working. The colonial state with its power to tax to seize land for Europeans enterprise to compel labor and build railroads ports and roads played an important role in the transformation. Even more powerful was the growing integration of Asian and African societies into a world economy that increasing demanded their gold, diamonds, copper, tin, rubber,coffee, cotton,sugar,cocoa, and many other products. But the economy transformations was bro of these twins pressures were far from uniforms. Many groups migrant workers and cash crops farmers, plantations laborers and domestic servants grab elites and day labors men and women experienced the colonial era differently as their daily working lives underwent profound changes.
The various degrees old ways of working were erode almost everywhere in the colonial world. Subsistence farming which was peasant families produced largely for their own needs demising as growing numbers directed at least some of their energies to working for wages or selling what they produced for a cash income. The money was both necessary to pay taxes and school fees and useful for being the various products such as machine produced textiles and bicycles that frat when chapter machines manufactured merchandise displaced their own hand made goods.

Forced Labor and the power of the state
Many of the new ways of working that emerged during the colonial era derived directly from the demands of the colonial state. The most obvious was required and unpaid labor on public projects such as buildings, railroads, and transporting goods. In French Africa all natives were legally obligated for statute labor of ten to twelve days a year a practice that lasted through 1946. It was much resented. The most infamous cruelties of forced labor occurred during the early twentieth century in the Congo Free state,then governed personally by king leopold the second of belgium. Eventually such outrages were widely publicized in Europe, where they crated a scandal forcing the Belgian government to take control of the congo in 1908 and ending leopards reign of terror.

Visual 18.3
In North America the primary European rivalries for territory involved Great Britain, France which came to control Tunisia, Algeria. This image appeared in the Cairo Punch a british owned magazine in Egypt published in Arabic probably around 1910. The visual 18.4 refers to two incidents. On the British side the cartoon evokes a 1906 between British soldiers hunting pigeons and local villages of Denshway. The following year in Morocco, French civilians building a small railroad near the labor of casablanca dug up parts of a muslim cemetery.








Wednesday, February 24, 2016

chapter 17 pg 862-877

Thrift
In England it is one of the richest countries in the world. There is an accumulation of wealth in the country to which past times can offer no parallel. The bank is filled with gold, there is no food in the empire,nor money either. There is no end to the manufacturing productions for the steam engine never tires. Notwithstanding with all this wealth, there is a big mass of poverty. Reporters constantly revealed to them as miseries endured by certain portions of the work populations. They have described the people employed in factories, workshops, mines and brickfield as in the pursuits of the country life. Much of the existing misery is caused by the selfishness by the greed to accumulate wealth on the one hand and on the other.


Art and the industrial revolution
In the mid 19th centuries the industrial revolution and a growing global empire had generated for many people in Great Britain feelings of big pride, achievement, and superiority. Nowhere did it register more clearly than in the crystal palace exhibition in 1851. It was held in London the exhibition was housed in a big structure made of cast iron and glass constructed in only nine months. It attracted more than 6 million visitors and contained 14,000 exhibits from all around the world. The most prominent symbol of the industrial revolution was the railroads. It was a thing of wonder, power, and speed. The iron railroad provided a magicians road.

Monday, February 22, 2016

chapter 17

The laboring classes; some were 70% or more were neither aristocrats nor members of the middle class. They were manual workers in the mines, ports, factories,contrition site, workshops and farms of an industrializing Britain. Their conditions tried and changed over time it was laboring classes who suffers most and benefit least from the epic transformations of the industrial revolution. The lives of the laboring classes were shaped primarily by the new working conditions of the industrial era. Chief among the conditions was rapid urbanization's. By 1851 a majority of Britons population lived in towns and cities and a big change from the overwhelming rural life of almost all previous civilizations. Later London was the worlds largest city with more than 6 million inhabitants. The cities were mostly over crowded and smoky with inadequate sanitation, endless row houses and ware houses and often polluted water supplies. This was the environment most of the urban workers lived in the first half of the 19th century. Then the industrial factories grew numbers of desperate people looked for employment offered a work environment far different from the artisans shop or the tents farm. In the early decades the 19th century britains industrialist favored girls and young unmarried women as employees in the mills. A gendered hierarchy of labor emerged in the factories with men supervisory and more skilled positions while women occupied the less skilled and lighter jobs. Women weren't welcome in the unions that offered men ability.

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

chapter 16 pg798-811

At the end of the Atlantic slavery during the nineteenth century surely marked a major and quite rapid turn in the world's social history and in the moral thinking of husband kind. The outcomes of that was the process were surprising and far from the expectations of abolitionists or the newly freed slaves. The former slaves lives did not improve dramatically. Nowhere in the Atlantic world except Haiti. The understandable of former slaves to continue working in plantation agriculture created labor shortage and set in motion. Newly freed people did not achieve anything close to political equality except in Haiti. White planters and farmers retained local authority in the Caribbean. In the southern U.S. a period of "radical reconstruction" happened.


Monday, February 8, 2016

chapter 16

The Atlantic revolution in North America, France, Haiti and Latin America took place in a large amount of the global framework. They occurred in the context of expensive wars, weakening states and destabilizing process of commercialization. The Atlantic revolution were destabilizing in various ways compared to the upheavals elsewhere. The wars that strained European imperial states like Britain, France, Spain were all global rather than regional. Then the Atlantic revolutions were distinctive in that they were closely connect to each other. The Atlantic revolution shared a set of common ideas. The ideas is that the Atlantic revolution derived from the European Enlightenment and were shared across the ocean in newspaper, books, and pamphlets. Human political and social arrangements could be engineered and improved by human action.

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

chapter 15 740-752

The science and enlightenment is that the scientific revolution spread to a wider European public during the 18th century. Novel techniques was added like the prisoning and bookmaking by a popular press, growing literacy and by a host of scientific societies. The numbers of people believed that the long term outcome of scientific development would be enlightenment; a term to define the 18th century in european history. European enlightenment thinkers shared this belief in the lower of knowledge to transform human society. They share a satirical style a commitment to open mindedness and inquiry and various degrees a hostility to establish the divine rights of kings and the privileges of Europeans society.

Monday, February 1, 2016

chapter 15

Europeans were central players in the globalization of christianity and the emergence of the modern science. They did not act alone in the cultural transformation of the early modern era. Asian, African, North American people largely determined that christianity would escape as it entered the new cultural environments. Christianity began to compete with a world religion. Buddhism held on to east asai just like hinduism in south asa. The cultural interactions of the early modern era did not take place on a one way street then the globalization of christianity; Christianity was limited to Europe at the beginning of the early modern ear. Christianity was seriously divided between the Roman Catholics of Western and Central Europe and Eastern Orthodox of Eastern Europe and Russia.

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

chapter 14 p687-699 and chapter 14 documents

The four centuries of the slave trade millions of Africans underwent some experience but the numbers varied over time. The 16th century slave exports from Africa averaged fewer than 3,000 annually. Those years the Portuguese were interested in the African gold, spices, and textiles. In Asia they became more involved in transporting African goods including slaves from African port to another. Later in the 17th century the pace picked up as the slave trading became highly competitive with the British, Dutch and French contesting the earlier Portuguese monopoly. Century and a half had 1700 and 1850 marked there high point of slave trade as the plantation economics of America boomed.



Chapter 14 documents
There were 4 documents and I thought document 14.4 The slave trade and the kingdom of Asante was interesting to me. The slave trade of Asante did not have much of an effect as it did in Kongo. The region known as the gold coast, the kingdom of Asante arose in the 18th century occupying about 100,000 square miles and 3 million people. It was a powerful state and heavily invested in slave trade.

Monday, January 25, 2016

chapter 14

There was not just the spice trade of Eurasia but also silver trade that was given birth to the global network of exchange. "Silver went round the world and made the world go round" says one of the historians. In the mid sixteenth century silver was discovered big around Bolivia and in Japan, then suddenly increased in metal. Spanish America had 85% of the worlds silver during the modern ear. Manila the capital of the Philippines was the annual Spanish shipment of silver which was drawn from the rich mines of Bolivia that was transported to Acapulco in Mexico and shipped across the pacific to the philippines.

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

intro to part 4 + chapter 13

Europeans ruled the Americans and controlled the worlds sea routes. The political and military power in mainland Asia and Africa was very limited. China and Japan strictly controlled Europeans missionaries and merchants who operated in their societies. Islam was the most rapidly spreading faith in much of asia and africa and in Europe, india and China.
People in fact continued to live in long ways and their societies operated according to traditional principles. Kings ruled Europe and male landowning aristocrats remained on top of social hierarchy.

Chapter 13
The great dying; people lived in the mesoamerican and Andean zones which were dominated by the Aztec and Inca empires. Isolation from the Afro Eurasian world and lack of animals meant that the absence of acquired immunities to the old world diseases like small pox, measles, typhus, influenza, malaria and yellow fever. When they came into contact with the European and African diseases, Native American people died in numbers in many cases up to 90% of the population.