Answer:
Atomic Bombs
Explanation:
Those cities were the place where the American Government conducted the Manhattan Project.
That project cost the government around $ 2 Billion with the purpose of creating mass destroying weapons that can turn the tide of war in one's favor. Eventually, it led to the creation of Atomic Bombs.
In the world war 2, US military dropped 2 of those atomic bombs, on the City of Hiroshima and Nagasaki In Japan. Killing around 146,000 people in Hiroshima and 80,000 people in Nagasaki.
This left the Japanese Government with no choice but to surrender, and make United States and its allies as the winner of world war 2.
Joseph Stalin. Hitlers biggest rival and leader of the soviet union.
Answer:
C is the correct option.
Explanation:
Napoleon Bonaparte was a french military leader, He conquered almost the whole of Europe in the Early Nineteenth Century. Conquest of Europe by him spread the ideas of the french revolution throughout Europe. The territories conquered by him had Versions of Napoleonic Code imposed on them which later formed the legal basis of European law today. The ideas of equality which was codified were also accepted by his opponents because they believed if they wanted to win they will have to create a strong state just like France.
Answer:
Explanation:
This dissertation studies the first Great Migration of African Americans from the rural South to Urban areas in the northern United States. While most existing research has focused on the experiences of the migrants themselves, I am focused on how this influx of rural black migrants impacted outcomes for African Americans who were already living in the north and had already attained a modicum of economic success. Common themes throughout this dissertation involve the use of the complete-count U.S. population census to link records across years. In the first chapter, I linked northern-born blacks from 1910 to 1930 to study how the arrival of new black residents affected the employment outcomes of existing northern-born black residents. I find that southern black migrants served as both competitors and consumers to northern-born blacks in the labor market. In the second chapter, my co-authors and I study the role of segregated housing markets in eroding black wealth during the Great Migration. Building a new sample of matched census addresses from 1930 to 1940, we find that racial transition on a block was associated with both soaring rental prices and declines in the sales value of homes. In other words, black families paid more to rent housing and faced falling values of homes they were able to purchase. Finally, the third chapter compares the rates of intergenerational occupational mobility by both race and region. I find that racial mobility difference in the North was more substantial than it was in the South. However, regional mobility difference for blacks is greater than any gap in intergenerational mobility by race in prewar American. Therefore, the first Great Migration helped blacks successfully translate their geographic mobility into economic mobility.