Trade supported, helped grow populations so all the villages grew. But then there is to many people and not enough food sometimes. Hope this helped!
THE HISTORY OF RACIAL EXCLUSION IN THE U.S. IMMIGRATION LAWS
A. From Chinese Exclusion to General Asian Subordination
1. Chinese Exclusion and Reconstruction
2. Japanese Internment and Brown v. Board of Education
B. The National Origins Quota System
C. Modern Racial Exclusion
1. The War on "Illegal Aliens" a/k/a Mexican Immigrants
2. Asylum, Haitian Interdiction, and the Politics of Race
3. Proposition 187 and Race
Racism, along with nativism, economic, and other social forces, has unquestionably influenced the evolution of immigration law and policy in the United States. It does not exist in a social and historical vacuum. Foreign and domestic racial subordination instead find themselves inextricably linked.
Happy children’s day everyone!
The need for new trade routes to the east, the desire to spread Christianity, and competition between European countries all contributed to the "<span>A. beginning of European global exploration in the 15th and 16th centuries" since the primary goal of exploration was to extract resources and spread Christianity. Ok.</span>