Answer:
Urbanization occurred rapidly in the second half of the nineteenth century in the led to a massive leap in industrialization, requiring large numbers of workers. These issues were almost always rooted in deep class inequalities, shaped by religious differences, and ethnic strife, and distorted by corrupt local politics.
Explanation:
The answer is China. Hope this helps :)
Robert E. Lee moved his troops west after he left Petersburg.
Internment camps were established in the United States t<span>o isolate people believed to be threats.</span>
The correct answer is: an extreme political ideology.
Indeed, the movement’s ideology was a very dogmatic blend of several ideologies and outlooks. They were heavily Stalinist and Maoist in their leftism; extremely xenophobic against both foreigners and national non-Khmer minorities and extremely agrarian.
With regards to their Stalinist/Maoist outlook they believed in absolute obedience to the party and its leaders, with a set of inviolable strict rules and laws and the belief that the ends justified any means.
They loathed national minorities as they saw them as a stain on their national Khmer purity and they despised foreigners because they refused to ever be colonized again, whether by Westerners or Asians.
They also considered that urban, capitalistic society was a disease and sought to eradicate it by eradicating its people.