vocabulary unit 5 #2. 1.government of india act 2.great leap forward 3.guomindang 4.iron curtain...
TRANSCRIPT
Vocabulary
Unit 5
#2
1. Government of India Act2. Great Leap Forward3. Guomindang4. Iron Curtain5. Korean Conflict6. kulaks7. Marshall plan8. May Fourth Movement9. New Economic Policy10. nonalignment11. North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO)12. perestroika13. Prague Spring14. purges15. Red Guard16. Sandinistas17. Six-Day War18. Solidarity
19.Tiananmen Square20. Truman Doctrine21. Warsaw Pact22. Al-Qaeda23. cartels24. International Monetary Fund25. Persian Gulf War26. World Bank27. Euro28. European Economic
Community29. European Community30. import substitution
industrialization31. McDonaldization32. North American Free Trade
Organization (NAFTA)33.Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC)34.World Trade Organization
(WTO)
Iron Curtain
• Term coined by Winston Churchill for the political barrier isolating Soviet dominated Eastern Europe from Western Europe
Tiananmen Square
• Beijing site of a 1989 student protest in favor of democracy; the Chinese military killed a large number of protestors
New Economic Policy (NEP)
• Lenin’s policy that allowed some private ownership and limited foreign investment to revitalize the Soviet economy
Guomindang (Kuomintang)
• China’s Nationalist political party founded by Sun Yat-sen in 1912 and based on democratic principles; in 1925, the party was taken over by Jiang Jieshi (Chiang Kai-shek), who made it into a more authoritarian party
Kulaks
• Russian peasants who became wealthy under Lenin’s New Economic Policy
Solidarity
• A Polish trade union that began the nation’s protest against communist rule
World Bank
• An agency of the United Nations that offers loans to countries to promote trade and economic development
Perestroika
• A restructuring of the Soviet economy to allow some local decision making
Red Guard
• A militia of young Chinese people organized to carry out Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution
Government of India Act
• Was the last pre-independence constitution of the British Raj. It granted Indian provinces autonomy. Direct elections are introduced for the first time. The right to vote was increased from seven million to thirty-five million.
Great Leap Forward
• The disastrous economic policy introduced by Mao Zedong that proposed the implementation of small-scale industrial projects
“Long Live the Great Leap Forward”
Korean Conflict
• Conflict between Communist and non-Communist forces in Korea from June 25, 1950, to July 27, 1953.
Marshall Plan
• A U.S. plan to support the recovery and reconstruction of Western Europe after World War II
May Fourth Movement
• A 1919 protest in China against the Treaty of Versailles and foreign influence
Nonalignment
• The policy of some developing nations to refrain from aligning with either the United States or the Soviet Union during the Cold War
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
• A defense alliance between nations of Western Europe and North America formed in 1949
Prague Spring
• A 1968 program of reform to soften socialism in Czechoslovakia; it resulted in the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia
Purges
• Joseph Stalin’s policy of exiling or killing millions of his opponents in the Soviet Union
Sandinistas
• A left-wing group that overthrew the dictatorship of Nicaraguan Anastacio Somoza in 1979
Six-Day War
• A brief war between Israel and a number of Arab states in 1967; during this conflict Israel took over Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, the Sinai Peninsula, and the West Bank
Truman Doctrine
• A 1947 statement by U.S. President Truman that pledged aid to any nation resisting communism
Warsaw Pact
• The 1955 agreement between the Soviet Union and the countries of eastern Europe in response to NATO
Al-Qaeda
• A terrorist group based in Afghanistan in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries
Cartels
• Unions of independent businesses in order to regulate production, prices, and the marketing of goods
International Monetary Fund
• An international organization founded in 1944 to promote market economies and free trade
Persian Gulf War
• The 1991 war between Iraq and a U.S.
Euro
• The standard currency introduced and adopted by the majority of members of the European Union in January 2002
European Economic Community(EEC or Common Market)
• An economic organization of European states set up by the Treaties of ROME in March 1957. Its member states agreed to coordinate their economic policies, and to establish common policies for agriculture, transport, the movement of capital and labor, the erection of common external tariffs, and the ultimate establishment of political unification.
European Community
• An organization of Western European countries, which came into being in 1967 through the merger of the European Economic Community (Common Market or EEC), European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom), and European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC), and was committed to economic and political integration as envisaged by the Treaties of Rome. It was superseded in 1993 by the EUROPEAN UNION.
Import Substitution Industrialization
• An economic system that attempts to strengthen a country’s industrial power by restricting foreign imports
McDonaldization
• Term used by sociologist George Ritzer in his book The McDonaldization of Society (1995). He describes it as the process by which a society takes on the characteristics of a fast-food restaurant (efficiency, calculability, predictability, & control)
• Extension of world trade to the Soviet Union
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
• An organization that prohibits tariffs and other trade barriers between Mexico, the United States, and Canada
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)
• Organization formed in 1960 by oil-producing countries to regulate oil supplies and prices
World Trade Organization (WTO)
• An international organization begun in 1995 to promote and organize world trade