OGT STUDY GUIDE
Enlightenment- 17th century intellectual movement
- Worked to limit power of government & church
- Locke believed job of government was to protect rights of thepeople or be overthrown.
- social contract (compact) = people give up sovereignty to a government or other authority in order to receive or maintain social order through the rule of law
- Enlightenment Thinkers:
- Locke= Natural Rights
- Montesquieu= Separation of Powers
- Voltaire= advocate of civil liberties and freedoms
- Enlightenment Ideas led to:
- American Revolution, U.S. Constitution & Bill of Rights, the French RevolutionLatin American wars for independence
- Divine Right: Belief that God puts monarch on throne
- Philosophe: French philosopher
Industrial Revolution
- Improved technology in agriculture increased output
- Industrial Revolution begins in Great Britain
- Many move from rural areas to cities to find work
- Industrialization results in urbanization-growth of cities
- Poor living conditions- slums
- Working conditions in factories: dangerous, long hours, littlepay
- Women & children also work in factories
- Led to rise of organized labor- Unions (not readily accepted)
- Demands for better pay, shorter hours, benefits
- Assembly Line allows for mass production, prices begin tofall
- Middle Class begins to develop as the standard of livingbegins to rise
- Populism & Progressivism are movements that develop inresponse to the poor living & working conditions
- Immigration to the United States increases because of theavailability of jobs
- Received low pay, often established own section of city
- Pushes and Pulls of immigration: persecution, opportunity, freedom
Imperialism
- Imperialism: Strong nation has political, economic and socialcontrol over a weaker nation
- White Man’s Burden- Idea that the west must “civilize” backward nations
- Colonial Powers force their culture & political systems on their colonies
- The colony exists to benefit the colonial power
- Imperialism was fueled by the need for markets & resources for industrialization
- U.S. becomes imperialist power after the Spanish-American War
- U.S. acquired Guam, Puerto Rico, & Philippines
- American businesses fueled U.S. acquisition of Hawaii
- President Teddy Roosevelt has “Big Stick” policy
- U.S. builds Panama Canal & intervenes in Latin America
- Results
- Japan modernizes for protection from imperialist take over
- China is separated into Spheres of Influence
- U.S. supports an Open Door Policy in China
- Struggles in African nations linked to past imperialist policies
World War I
- 4 M.A.I.N. Causes: militarism, alliances, imperialism, nationalism
- First modern war: advanced weapons are used
- Submarines, machine guns, tanks, planes, gas
- Assassination of archduke immediate cause of the war
- Central Powers: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire, Bulgaria
- Allies: Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, and U.S.
- U.S. Involvement:
- Initially neutral, sell supplies to both sides
- German unrestricted submarine war policy- reason for U.S. entry
- U.S. involvement led to defeat of Central Powers
- 14 Points- President Wilson’s plan for a lasting peace
- Not as harsh as Treaty of Versailles
- Treaty of Versailles
- Ends WWI, very harsh towards Germany
- War Guilt Clause, Reparations, Loss of Territory
- Germany demilitarized
- German hostility, resentment and economic hardship
- Results of the Treaty
- League of Nations established to prevent war (it fails)
- no power to prevent aggression
- U.S. doesn’t join
- After WWI: Russian Revolution, Great Depression, Rise of Dictators, & WWII
- Great Migration (U.S).- Afr. Americans move North for jobs in defense plants
- U.S. returns to isolationism distraughtover monetary & humancost of WWI
- Red Scare= fear of communism
- Result of Communist/Bolshevik Revolution in Russia (U.S.S.R.)
- Restricted immigration tothe U.S. (nativism – resentment of foreigners / immigrants)
- Harlem Renaissance- Glorificationof the accomplishments/culture of AfricanAmericans
- Musicians, writers, artists
- Beginning of a Civil RightsMovement followingWWI
- 19th Amendment gave women theright to vote
- Causes of Great Depression (1929 - 41)
- Bank failures
- Underconsumption
- Overproduction
- Stock market crash
- FDR’s plan to combat the Depression was called the New Deal
- 3 R’s (Relief, Recovery, Reform)
World War II
- Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, and Japan
- War begins in 1939 when Germany invades Poland
- Allied Powers: Great Britain, U.S., Soviet Union
- U.S. enters war when Japan attacks U.S. base at Pearl Harbor (1941)
- Japanese-Americans are forced to live in internment camps
- Women work in factories to help the war effort
- African Americans continue to migrate north for factory jobs
- War ends when U.S. drops two atomic bombs on Japan (Hiroshima & Nagasaki)
- Results of war
- Millions of refugees- people left homeless because of war
- Many European colonies receive their independence
- United Nations established to preserve world peace
- Nation of Israel established (Arab-Israeli conflict begins)
- U.S. & Soviet Union emerge has world’s “super powers”
- Atomic bombs begin arms race between U.S. and Soviet Union
Cold War
- End of WWII when the U.S. and Soviet Unionbecome suspicious of each other’smotives and policies
- U.S. foreign policy based oncontainment (Truman) of communism
- Soviet Union controls much ofEastern Europe, referred to as IronCurtain or Soviet Bloc (or even “satellite nations”) of the Warsaw Pact
- Marshall Plan was U.S. program to rebuild Europe after WWII
- Plan rejected by SovietUnion because it would weaken appeal ofcommunism in WesternEurope
- Soviet Union and U.S. disagree overBerlin
- Berlin Airlift & Berlin Wall
- Korean Conflict helps Truman gainsupport for massive U.S. militarybuild-up
- Comm. N. Korea invades U.N. (and U.S.) supported S. Korea
- Castro comes to power in Cuba allieswith the Soviet Union
- Cuban Missiles Crisis begins (JFK)
- Soviet Union attempts toinstall nuclear missiles inCuba
- War is prevented with theU.S. when Khrushchevbacks down & removesthe missiles
- Vietnam War begins whenCommunist North Vietnam invadesSouth Vietnam
- U.S. aids South Vietnambecause of the DominoTheory (if one nations falls to Communism, other nations will fall like dominoes)
Civil Rights Movement
- Jim Crow Laws allow for the legal separation of races (segregation)
- Upheld by Supreme Court in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
- Brown v. Board of Education declares segregation unconstitutional (1954)
- Overturns Plessy v. Ferguson
- Civil disobedience: legal form of protest to bring about change (boycotts)
- MLK delivers “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963
1950s – 1960s – 1970s
- U.S. economy was strong following WWII
- Cities suffer financially as middle class moves to suburbs
- Baby Boomers: large increase in birthrate following WWII
- McCarthyism: campaign to root out communism (a 2ndred scare)
- Technological advancements created more leisure time for upper & middle class
- Suburban conformity led to the Beatnik movement in “protest”
- Richard Nixon (R) resigns the presidency when the Watergate scandal (Dem. break-in w/ audiotapes of White House conversations proving presidential knowledge) is uncovered (1974)
- NOW (National Org. of Women) fights for the rights or women’s equality
- Cesar Chavez & the United Farm Workers fight for the rights of Latinos
- AIM (Am. Indian Move.) seeks better treatment and rights for Native Americans
Forms of Government
- Monarchy
- All monarchs gain power through heredity
- Absolute: monarchs has sole control overgovernment
- People have few or no rights
- Limited: Power of monarch limited byconstitution and/or parliament
- Some monarchs are figureheads- theyhave no real power
- Titles- king/queen, emperor/empress, czar/czarina
- Dictator
- Usually comes to power through military force
- Has absolute power
- When a removed from power there is no clearsuccession
- People have few or no rights
- Oligarchy- like a dictatorship except a small group rulesinstead of a single person
- Democracy: Government by the consent of the people
- Direct: the people directly vote on all matters
- Representative(Indirect): the people electrepresentatives to make decisions for them (a republic)
- Power is limited by the constitution & regular elections
- Theocracy = a state ruled by clergy, or by officials who are regarded as divinely guided (No separation of church & state)
The U.S. Constitution and Government / Citizenship
- Constitution known as the Supreme Law of the Land and the only way to change the Constitution is through the amendment process
- First Ten Amendments known as the Bill of Rights
- Amendments to know
- 1st – Freedom of press, religion, petition, assembly, & speech
- 13th – Abolished slavery
- 14th – Citizenship to everyone born in U.S. (“equal protection”)
- 15th – Right to vote to all adult males
- 16th – Government can collect income tax (Progressive Reform)
- 17th – Direct election of senators (Progressive Reform)
- 18th – Prohibition (Progressive Reform)
- 19th – Women’s suffrage / voting (Progressive Reform)
- 21st – Overturns 18th
- 24th – Outlaws literacy test & poll taxes as requirements for voting
- 26th – Lowers voting age to 18
- The U.S. government can only limit or place restrictions your rights if: clear &present danger, public safety, national security, libel, & equal opportunity
- Schenck v. U.S. established clear & present danger
- Individual rights are relative, not absolute
- There is a balance between individual rights,the rights of others, and the common good.
- The three branches of government operateon a system of checks & balances
- Legislative – law making
- Executive – law enforcing
- Judicial – law interpreting
- People achieve governmental change through political action, social protest and revolution.
- The consequences of oppression, discrimination and conflict between cultures is present throughout history and governments can both cause and correct this.
- Defamation is making a negative claim against someone. Libel is printed, slander is spoken.
- Eminent domain = property taken either for government use devoted to public or civic use or, in some cases, economic development (may be compensated or not)
Supreme Court Cases
- Marbury vs. Madison establishes principle of judicial review
- Court’s ability to declare acts of Congress unconstitutional
- Plessy vs. Ferguson: declaredsegregation legal
- Brown vs. Board of Education: segregation illegal (Overturns Plessy v.Ferguson)
- Miranda vs. Arizona: “you have the right to remain silent…”
- Bakke vs. CA: while affirmative action systems are constitutional, a quota system based on race is unconstitutional (no “reverse discrimination”)
Hints for Writing Short & Extended Responses
- Understand the question: read the question carefully
- Think through your answer: Write a brief outline before writing your answer
- 4 point responses should consist of 4 separate ideas or pieces of evidence / 2 point responses should consist of 2 separate ideas
- State the main idea of your answer (topic sentence) & provide supporting evidence (2 or 4 pieces of evidence that supports your thesis statement)
- Conclude your answer: summarize the main ideas in your answer
- Types of Economies
- Traditional: prehistoric, allocation of resources based on inheritance, barter
- Command: all economic decisions made by the government
- Market: Businesses privately owned,
- Mixed: Combination of privately owned & government controlledbusinesses
- Trade: buying, selling, and exchanging of goods within and between countries.
- Exports: products leaving a country
- Imports: products entering a country
- Trade Imbalance occurs when a country’s imports and exports are notequal
- More imports than exports hurt a country’s economy
- Tariff is a tax placed on imports to protect domestic products.
- Embargo/blockade: a country refuses to trade with another country forpolitical or economic reason
- Fundamental Economic Questions: what goods and services to produce, how to produce them and who will consume them
- Taxes: Government raises money (revenue) by collecting taxes
- The U.S. government provides public services, redistributes income, regulates economic activity and promotes economic growth and stability.
- Congress created the Federal Reserve to manage the nation’s economy. The FederalReserve sets monetary policy
- Set the interest rate: raise rate to get people to save, lower rate to get people to spend / borrow
- GDP (Gross Domestic Product) = total dollar value of all goods and services produced over a specific time period (helps us understand the size of a country’s economy and the health of a country’s economy)
- CPI (Consumer Price Index) = A measurethatexamines theweighted average of prices ofa basket of consumer goods and services (CPI rises, inflation rises)
Geography
- Region: an area with one or more common characteristics or feature.
- Geographic region (Rocky Mountains), Political Region (U.S.A.),Cultural region (Middle East)
- Geographic changes occur over time as a result of human activities such as mining and logging that change the physical geography of an area.
- Technology impacts the way humans deal with the natural geography of anarea.
- Advanced transportation allows for the settlement in remote areas.
- Technology also allows for the diffusion(transfer) of ideas from one place toanother.
- Throughout history people have migrated (moved) for political, social, economic, and environmental reasons.
- immigration: movement into a country
- emigration: movement out of a country
- Globalization: the act, process, or policy of making something worldwide in scopeor application
- Indigenous: native to an area
- Interdependence: being mutually dependent
- Topography: graphic representation of the surface features of a place or region on amap
Skills & Methods
- Source: a person or document that provides information
- Both primary & secondary sources contain some level of bias (prejudice).
- A credible or reliable source is one in which you can trust the author.
- Propaganda is used to persuade someone to your point a view
- A thesis must be supported by evidence contained within the paper(source)
- When completing a research project you must collect data, refine yourtopic(according to the data collected), develop and support a thesis.
- Logical fallacies: statements or arguments based on a false or invalid inference
- Unstated assumptions: supporting ideas that are not explicitly presented in thesource.
- Stereotype: an oversimplified opinion or idea
Vocabulary
- Analyze: critically look at something and come to a decision.
- Critique: make a judgment about something.
- Define: give the meaning to something
- Demonstrate: show that something is true or false by using evidence or reasoning
- Determine: come to a conclusion about something
- Evaluate: make judgments about some idea using evidence
- Explain: provide reasons for something in order to make it clear and understandable
- Trace: provide a brief account of the main ideas following the progress or history of the subject