The Seeds Of Democracy
Like a plant susceptible to winter’s grasp, the growth and fruition of democracy as a political ideology has not survived without a fair bit of struggle. As with any belief that opposes the status quo, it has a turbulent history that is stained with violence and blood-shed. Nevertheless, its seeds were sown in fertile soil, and across the world it survived amongst a variation of conflict and political shifts.
At the turn of the 20th century, Russia was facing extensive political and social issues. By the time the First World War had finished, Nicholas II, the last Tsar (Emperor) of the Romanov dynasty had abdicated his throne. In the aftermath of his abdication, a civil war sparked between the Bolshevik party and the anti-Bolshevik parties (aided by certain Western countries). At the point that the Bolshevik victory was secured, the fate of Russia as a communist state was sealed. Whilst on paper this form of socialism seemed to share the same sense of individual equality that democratic states embraced, its political system compromised of a single party state – the Bolshevik party. After Lenin’s death, Joseph Stalin took over and chaos followed. It was not until 1989 that communism ended in Russia. Today it exists as a multi-party representative democracy.
The British Agricultural Revolution, or Second Agricultural Revolution, was the unprecedented increase in agricultural production in Britain due to ...
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Answer:
The right answer is: domino theory.
Explanation:
The domino theory was seen as a likely outcome in the geopolitical chess of the Cold War in the developing world. According to the views and mentality of the era, if one country falls to Communist hands, neighbors will follow. It was a rationale for action in both Korea and Vietnam. It was also applied to Latin America.
One of the main ways in which the 1840 World’s Anti-Slavery Convention affected the women’s suffrage movement is that it inspired many women to seek suffrage for themselves, since they saw people fighting for African American rights.