Women: Kinder, Kurche, Kutcher (Children, Church, Kitchen). Maternal role highlited as one of nurturing the family. Men were to work and protect the family.
Youth: Hitler Youth, League of German Girls, other youth clubs designed to indoctrinate and control them from a young age to continue the nazi legacy. In school, new subjects like race studies introduced and other subjects were adapted to Nazi view e.g. Biology and PE concerned race and more emphasis was put on PE
German Jews: Laws made against them to discriminate e.g. The Nuremburg Laws (concerning citizenship and marriage)
Society in general: Censorship of the media, fear due to gestapo (secret police)
You can do some more research into these topics as this is just a brief overview
1 is the answer to your question.
The United States emerged as a great industrial power following World War I -- the most powerful nation in the world, in fact.
The growth of the United States as the world's leader in industry had been proceeding rapidly already prior to the Great War (which we know as World War I). By 1900, 38% of the world's wealth was held by the United States. By 1914, the US produced as much coal as Britain and Germany combined, as well as producing over 40% of the world's iron.
But before World War I, the United States tended to take an isolationist stance toward other nations. World War I advanced the US into superpower status as a nation that used its industrial might to involve itself in global affairs.
https://socratic.org/questions/how-were-the-west-african-kingdoms-involved-in-the-slave-trade
With the development of the trans-Saharan slave trade and the economies of gold in the western Sahel, a number of the major states became organized around the slave trade, including the Ghana Empire, the Mali Empire, and Songhai Empire. However, other communities in West Africa largely resisted the slave trade.
The transatlantic slave trade began during the 15th century when Portugal, and subsequently other European kingdoms, were finally able to expand overseas and reach Africa. The Portuguese first began to kidnap people from the west coast of Africa and to take those they enslaved back to Europe