Review of the Worker and Public Health Activities Program Administered by the Department of Energy and the Department of Health and Human Services

Review of the Worker and Public Health Activities Program Administered by the Department of Energy and the Department of Health and Human Services

  • Publisher: National Academies Press
  • ISBN: 9780309103381
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780309666152
  • eISBN Epub: 9780309180160
  • Place of publication:  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

    SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

    By subscribing, you accept our Privacy Policy