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    Ap World History Outline

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    Terry Wei Traditions and Encounters AP World History Review Chapter 1: Prehistory The first chapter of Traditions and Encounters sets the stage for the drama of world history by presenting the major milestones in the development of humans from their earliest appearance on earth to the dawn of civilization. This chapter addresses the physical evolution of the species and their migrations throughout the globe as well as the revolutionary transformation from all humans surviving by hunting and gathering

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    Equal Rights for Women

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    Women have long been fighting for equal rights in every sphere of society. Land ownership‚ choice of marriage partner‚ and right to work or leave the house are a few of the basic rights that many men and women take for granted. Many nation-states have been reluctant to treat women as full citizens‚ entitled to the full array of civil and human rights‚ because they view them as incomplete national subjects . The issue of women being viewed as incomplete national subjects is three-fold; male-dominated

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    Chapter 13 Ap World

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    1) The Shapes of Human Communities 1. In 1500‚ the world had all different societies‚ gatherers and hunters to empires‚ but it was different 2. Paleolithic Persistence a) gathering and hunting societies (Paleolithic peoples) still existed throughout the world but they had changed over time b) b. had new & improved technologies and ideas‚ e.g.‚ outrigger canoes‚ fish hooks‚ etc (had not adopted agriculture) c) exchanged goods over hundreds of miles and developed

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    womens rights essay

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    Fight for Women’s Rights In the 19th century‚ most women stayed at home and took care of their children. As time went on‚ women began to get an education‚ and learned more skilled jobs. Women started to realize that they can do something just as good as men can. When World War I broke out and men left to fight in the war‚ women took over the jobs that men use to do. Additionally‚ some went to the battle fields and helped nurse the soldiers. When the war ended‚ many saw how women can be just as

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    "Women ought to have representatives‚ instead of being arbitrarily governed without any direct share allowed them in the deliberations of government." (Wollstonecraft‚ 1792). Women began to consider that the way they had been being treated might have not been fair. Women of the eighteenth century did not wish to have greater power then men. They only wished for equal rights. Young girls could only dream of continuing their schooling and obtaining a higher education. Men‚ who had control over women

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    Evolution of Women Rights

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    striking women. Unhappy with their lack of rights and how they are treated by men. Now we faced the times in which women are striving to independence. I think it’s worth observing how they rights developed throughout the history. Because what we‚ women‚ have now was achieved by the really hard work and sacrifice made by others and I think we do not really appreciate it. The whole history of women’s right started exactly in 1848 thank to Elizabeth Stanton and Lucretia Moll. These two women made the

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    Ap World History Essay

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    AP World History Ch. 11 Notes * Han empire falls and its territories divided 220 C.E * Warfare among territories causes development of small pox * Ge Hong‚ a Daoist interested in discovering elixir of life * Daoists made significant discoveries in metallurgy‚ pharmacology‚ and math * Tang empire ended in 907 C.E Sui and Tang Empires * Fall of Han allowed many different politic styles. * Sui reunified China and reestablished Confucianism as central philosophy *

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    Statutory Rights of Women

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    MATERNITY BENEFIT ACT‚ 1961 Important Provisions of Maternity Benefit Act‚ 1961 Women at the reproductive stage are exposed to special risks during pregnancy and child bearing‚ and mortality and maternal morbidity are factors which require special consideration. The Maternity benefit Act was passed to regulate the employment of women for certain period before and after the child birth and to provide certain maternity and other benefits. Definitions "wages"

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    Muslim women being shown as inferior in Islam to men. Daily Mail author Sue Reid (2011) discusses multiple instances of women being subject of domestic violence‚ and being refused a divorce whilst their husbands enter marriages overseas. The mentality of Muslim men being abusive to women can cause issues with social cohesion as Britain is a country where women have equal rights to men. Reid article is backed up by the ICM Unlimited (2015) survey which stated that 39% of Muslims believe that women should

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    Womens Rights 1930

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    Women’s Rights of the 1930’s Women who were widowed or divorced‚ or whose husbands had l left them‚ struggled to keep their families alive; single women had to fend for themselves. These women were truly on the margins‚ practically invisible. “We did not go hungry‚ but we lived lean.” That sums up the experience of many families during the 1930’s. The typical woman in the 1930s had a husband who was still employed‚ although he had probably taken a pay cut to keep his job; if the man lost his

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