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Lana71 [14]
3 years ago
12

What were the three factors of production required to drive the industrial revolution

History
1 answer:
vova2212 [387]3 years ago
5 0
The three factors of production are; Land, Labor and Capital
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The factor that most contributed to the development of Roman civilization was
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Rome's geography

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This is because of the mass amount of water (oceans) surrounding them.

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30 points!<br> help asap.<br> In 3 to 4 sentences, summarize the key features of the Jewish Law.
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The Jewish law said that only Jews had to wear the Star of David once Adolf Hitler came into power.
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From which region has there been a dramatic increase in immigration to the United States since 1965?
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<span>It has been from Latin America that there has been a dramatic increase in immigration to the United States since 1965. This has been in part due to better job opportunities in the US. </span>
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What factors helped the economies of the muslim empire prosper?​
weqwewe [10]

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Prosper means the economies succeeded or did well.

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And Their development of advanced concepts, techniques and use in production, investment, finance, economic development, and etc. This helped them with the way they had lived their lives.

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Evaluate the extent to which the federal government affected the United States socially between 1948 and 1980.
Drupady [299]

Answer:

The entry of the United States into World War II caused vast changes in virtually every aspect of American life. Millions of men and women entered military service and saw parts of the world they would likely never have seen otherwise. The labor demands of war industries caused millions more Americans to move--largely to the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf coasts where most defense plants located. When World War II ended, the United States was in better economic condition than any other country in the world. Even the 300,000 combat deaths suffered by Americans paled in comparison to any other major belligerent.

Building on the economic base left after the war, American society became more affluent in the postwar years than most Americans could have imagined in their wildest dreams before or during the war. Public policy, like the so-called GI Bill of Rights passed in 1944, provided money for veterans to attend college, to purchase homes, and to buy farms. The overall impact of such public policies was almost incalculable, but it certainly aided returning veterans to better themselves and to begin forming families and having children in unprecedented numbers.

Not all Americans participated equally in these expanding life opportunities and in the growing economic prosperity. The image and reality of overall economic prosperity--and the upward mobility it provided for many white Americans--was not lost on those who had largely been excluded from the full meaning of the American Dream, both before and after the war. As a consequence, African Americans, Hispanic Americans, and American women became more aggressive in trying to win their full freedoms and civil rights as guaranteed by the Declaration of Independence and U.S. Constitution during the postwar era.

The postwar world also presented Americans with a number of problems and issues. Flushed with their success against Germany and Japan in 1945, most Americans initially viewed their place in the postwar world with optimism and confidence. But within two years of the end of the war, new challenges and perceived threats had arisen to erode that confidence. By 1948, a new form of international tension had emerged--Cold War--between the United States and its allies and the Soviet Union and its allies. In the next 20 years, the Cold War spawned many tensions between the two superpowers abroad and fears of Communist subversion gripped domestic politics at home.

In the twenty years following 1945, there was a broad political consensus concerning the Cold War and anti-Communism. Usually there was bipartisan support for most US foreign policy initiatives. After the United States intervened militarily in Vietnam in the mid-1960s, however, this political consensus began to break down. By 1968, strident debate among American about the Vietnam War signified that the Cold War consensus had shattered, perhaps beyond repair.

Explanation:

This is from the library of congress. The link is https://www.loc.gov/classroom-materials/united-states-history-primary-source-timeline/post-war-united-states-1945-1968/overview/

This isn't a fake. You can tell because it has .gov at the end

5 0
3 years ago
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