Answer:
The emergence of imperial Japan
Foreign affairs
Achieving equality with the West was one of the primary goals of the Meiji leaders. Treaty reform, designed to end the foreigners’ judicial and economic privileges provided by extraterritoriality and fixed customs duties was sought as early as 1871 when the Iwakura mission went to the United States and Europe. The Western powers insisted, however, that they could not revise the treaties until Japanese legal institutions were reformed along European and American lines. Efforts to reach a compromise settlement in the 1880s were rejected by the press and opposition groups in Japan. It was not until 1894, therefore, that treaty provisions for extraterritoriality were formally changed.
Concorde is French for 'agreement', and this was chosen to signify the agreement and co-operation between Britain and France in developing the plane.
Answer:
After the Civil War, sharecropping and tenant farming took the place of slavery and the plantation system in the South.... Under the sharecropping system, the landlord typically supplied the capital to buy the seed and equipment needed to sow, cultivate, and harvest a crop, while the sharecropper supplied the labor.
"States needed to be given more control" was true of Southern beliefs prior to the Civil War, specifically in the realm of slavery, since the South was upset that the North was trying to end the institution of slavery.
The main two countries during the cold war were the US and Russia