Some keys to understand social changes at the contemporary history

Some keys to understand social changes at the contemporary history

  • Author: Alonso Marcos, Antonio
  • Publisher: Dykinson
  • ISBN: 9788413778143
  • eISBN Pdf: 9788413778341
  • Place of publication:  Madrid , Spain
  • Pages: 212
  • Cover
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Index
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. The modern revolutions
    • 1.1. Life before 1789
    • 1.2. Causes of the french revolution
      • 1.2.1. Economic causes
      • 1.2.2. Social causes
      • 1.2.3. Political causes
      • 1.2.4. Ideological causes
    • 1.3. Stages of the french revolution
      • 1.3.1. The States General
      • 1.3.2. The Constituent Assembly
      • 1.3.3. The Legislative Assembly (1791-92)
      • 1.3.4. The Convention and the Terror (1792-95)
      • 1.3.5. The Directory (1795-99)
      • 1.3.6. The Consulate (1799-1804)
      • 1.3.7. Napoleon, emperor (1804-14)
    • 1.4. The church and the revolutio
    • 1.5. Revolution and counterrevolution (19th century)
      • 1.5.1. The Congress of Vienna and the Holy Alliance
      • 1.5.2. The Liberal Revolutions: 1820, 1830 and 1848
      • 1.5.3. The Destruction of the Old Regime
  • Chapter 2. The industrial revolution
    • 2.1. Introductio
    • 2.2. Origins of the industrial revolutio
    • 2.3. First and second industrial revolutions
    • 2.4. Taylorism and fordism
    • 2.5. Consequences of the industrial revolution
      • 2.5.1. The demographic transition
      • 2.5.2. The urbanizatio
      • 2.5.3. The irruption of the proletariat
    • 2.6. Texts for comment
      • 2.6.1. World Population Growth
      • 2.6.2. Rerum Novarum (May 15, 1891)
      • 2.6.3. Laudato si ‘(24 May 2015)
  • Chapter 3. Colonialism
    • 3.1. Debates on colonialis
    • 3.2. The berlin conference (1885)
    • 3.3. Rostow’s theory of development by stages
    • 3.4. The term “third world”
  • Chapter 4. Totalitarianism
    • 4.1. Totalitarianisms: common features
    • 4.2. Communism in russia
      • 4.2.1. Socialism before Marx
      • 4.2.2. Marxism, communism, socialism, anarchism in the 19th century
      • 4.2.3. The Arrival of Communism in Russia
      • 4.2.4. The 1905 Revolution: the dress rehearsal
      • 4.2.5. The 1917 revolutions and the Bolshevik power
      • 4.2.6. Stalin reaches power
      • 4.2.7. New Economic Policy (1921-28) and Five-Year Plans (1928-91)
      • 4.2.8. The internal evolution of the Soviet Union (USSR)
    • 4.3. The italian fascism
      • 4.3.1. The origins of Italian Fascism
      • 4.3.2. Theories about Fascism
      • 4.3.3. Characteristics of Fascism
      • 4.3.4. Mussolini, leader of the masses
      • 4.3.5. The march on Rome
      • 4.3.6. Mussolini, head of the government
      • 4.3.7. The fascistization of Italy
      • 4.3.8. The Lateran Pacts (1929)
      • 4.3.9. Subordination and end of fascism
    • 4.4. German nazism
      • 4.4.1. The impact of the Treaty of Versailles on Germany
      • 4.4.2. The Roaring Twenties
      • 4.4.3. Hitler’s rise to power
      • 4.4.4. Three decisive nights
      • 4.4.5. Catholic Church approach towards German Nazism
  • Chapter 5. The world after world war II
    • 5.1. The nuremberg trials
    • 5.2. The united nations system
  • Chapter 6. The cold war: Two worlds apart
    • 6.1. The consequences of world war II
    • 6.2. Cold war stages
      • 6.2.1. Beginnings of the Cold War (1945-1947)
      • 6.2.2. The great tensions (1948-1955)
      • 6.2.3. Peaceful Coexistence (1955-1962)
      • 6.2.4. The détente (1962-1975)
      • 6.2.5. The new Cold War (1975-1985)
      • 6.2.6. The end of the Cold War (1985-1991)
  • Chapter 7. The middle east conflict
    • 7.1. The origins
    • 7.2. The milestones
  • Chapter 8. The world after the fall of the berlin wall
    • 8.1. The beginning of a new age
    • 8.2. Usa after 1989. From bush to bush, and from biden to biden
    • 8.3. The new russia: From yeltsin to putin
  • Chapter 9. The current world
    • 9.1. Islamic fundamentalism
    • 9.2. The european union
    • 9.3. Emerging or emerged china?
    • 9.4. The crisis of capitalism and the triumph of social networks
    • 9.5. Coronavirus, coronacrisis and the debate over the state control
  • Chapter 10. Basic bibliography
  • About the author

Subjects

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