² The process where people move from rural areas (farms) towns & cities which results in the town populations growth. ^urbanisation ² The mechanisation of labour (machine instead of men) used to mass produce items the movement of people to cities & improved transport leading to greater wealth and population ^industrilasation ² ^whereworker band toether to have more power to stand up for their right in the workplace ^trade uninimsn ² And econimic system based ^capitilism^ on private ownership of the means of production (factories & raw materials) for personal profit ² An econmis system based on the collective ownership of the mean of production (factories & raw materials) by all people with the profit to be shared amongst all e.g of polices= free health & education ² When a single nation authority power has control over smaller nation or territories& benefits from the goods of these contries ² The manufacture of goos large quantities, often using machines & an assembly - line techniques ² An unprocessed natural product used in manufacture e.g coton, woollen fliece. ^^raw mat eirals
The increased used of machines to replace human manual labour e.g farmer
People had already been living in the Americas for thousands of years before the Europeans "discovered" the Americas. When the Europeans invaded this land they brought with them diseases such as smallpox, malaria, yellow fever, plague, typhus, and influenza contagions that repeatedly spread through the Native American peoples, killing them in high numbers. At the time the United States was settled by Europeans, it was abundantly populated by dozens of separate nations with diverse civilizations and cultures. Despite their initial confusion to their situation after the arrival of Europeans, the Native Americans did not take their disenfranchisement from their own land lying down. Native Americans have a long history of "fighting back" against invaders