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hodyreva [135]
2 years ago
10

Internment camps were also known as

History
2 answers:
nata0808 [166]2 years ago
8 0
Hey!

The internment camps were also known as relocation centers, once it was a kind of prison where people were locked for some reason. For example, during the World War II, a lot of Japanese people were relocated in these internment camps, because there was fear that the Japanese people that lived in US, would react to the US attacks in the war.
Hope this helps!
Tamiku [17]2 years ago
6 0

Answer

The internment camps are also known as Relocation centers.

Explanation

The internment camps were built during Second World War by the President Franklin Roosevelt by his executive order in response of attack by Japan in Pearl Harbour. This executive order served as the basis of relocation of the Japanese American living in America into these restoration camps away from wherever they were living.

Further Explanation

The attack on Pearl Harbour incited the Americans to take necessitated action in avoiding the possibility of any other such attack. Hence with the executive order 9066 the Japanese living in America were relocated to these restoration camps in the fear that these may involve themselves to help enemies. Out of all the people relocated into these camps, nearly half of them were Americans.

Furthermore, the enquiries were conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation which investigated the homes of the Japanese Americans and the Japanese living in USA.  Near around 12000 lives were affected by the orders which made them suffer the problems like food shortages, inadequate living conditions.

Learn More

Learn more about the forced relocation of Japanese Americans from the West Coast during the Second World War :  

brainly.com/question/155295 ;Answer by Tails

Learn more about the Second World War: brainly.com/question/1168541 Answer by Taskmasters

Keywords

Interment camps in USA, Pearl Harbour bombings, impact of Japanese attack on America, relocation camps, lives of Japanese Americans during Second World War, Roosevelt policies during Second World War.

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Answer:

The name “Josiah Wedgwood” doesn’t pique the interest of most tech bros.

He didn’t grace stages clad in a black turtleneck. He didn’t build a steel or railroad empire. He wasn’t the richest man of all time, or the most powerful. But nearly 300 years ago, in a small village in the English hills, he revolutionized the way the world thought about business and entrepreneurship — by making pottery.

Wedgwood has been called the “first tycoon,” the “Steve Jobs” of the 18th century, and “one of the most innovative retailers the world has ever seen.” Scholars regard him as both the father of modern marketing and the creator of the first luxury brand.

In his quest to invent and sell ceramic wares, he pioneered sales techniques like money back guarantees, free delivery, and “influencer” marketing.

This is the story of a small-time potter from the middle of nowhere who turned a “rude uncultivated craft” into a thriving global industry.

A potter is born

Josiah was born on July 12, 1730, in Burslem, England, the 13th child of an impoverished and struggling potter.

In these times, pottery was seen as a crude, dirty, and “undignified” craft. Like most in the trade, Josiah’s father, Thomas, produced low-quality, cheap wares that were “black and mottled in color.” His work was a nothing more than a means of survival.

When Josiah was 9 years old, his father died, leaving the ailing business (and a mountain of debt) to his sons. The children worked brutal 12-hour days, lugging around and battering monstrous chunks of clay.

A depiction of The Churchyard Works in Burslem, England, where Josiah served his apprenticeship in the early 1700s (thepotteries.org)

In these dismal conditions, Josiah contracted smallpox. He narrowly survived, but the illness left his right leg permanently crippled. Unable to perform manual labor, he began to experiment with the business side of pottery: Technology, marketing, and innovation.

By 22, he’d mastered the trade and decided to branch out on his own.

In a neighboring town, Josiah worked with Thomas Whieldon, a renowned potter who’d come up with a signature “tortoiseshell” glaze. By breaking from the mold, Whieldon had attracted acclaim and been able to boost his prices.

Here, Josiah came to his first entrepreneurial realization: “Invention without experiment signifies very little,” he wrote. “Everything derives from experiment[s].”

Move fast and break porcelain

At the time, however, there was little incentive to experiment: It was expensive and risky, and “entrepreneurship” was not celebrated like it is today.

But the young potter had been raised to “question the status quo” of establishments and “create [his] own culture.” And from his village in the hills, he began to notice a shift.

The act of drinking tea, and the fancy ceramic wares it required, was reserved for the upper class — but a “new consumer” was emerging, a generation of up-and-comers who wanted to “display their taste.”

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