Global Interdependence
Explore recent history with high sophistication. Study the Cold War, decolonization, globalization, and the digital revolution that defines our world today.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this level, you'll understand:
- The Cold War as a global system of competing ideologies
- Decolonization movements across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East
- The formation of new nation-states and their challenges
- Global institutions (UN, IMF, World Bank) and their roles
- Civil rights movements worldwide, not just in the U.S.
- Cold War conflicts: Korea, Vietnam, Middle East, proxy wars
- The collapse of communism in Europe and Asia
- Globalization and its economic/cultural impacts
- China's post-1978 transformation into a global power
- The digital revolution and its social consequences
- Environmental history and climate change recognition
- 21st-century migration patterns and demographics
Key Figures
Harry S. Truman
U.S. President who made the atomic bomb decision and launched the Cold War strategy of containment.
Mao Zedong
Founded the People's Republic of China, transforming the world's most populous nation into a communist state.
Kwame Nkrumah
Led Ghana to independence in 1957, becoming a symbol of African decolonization.
Martin Luther King Jr.
Led nonviolent resistance during the U.S. Civil Rights Movement, inspiring global justice movements.
Nelson Mandela
Anti-apartheid revolutionary who became South Africa's first Black president, symbol of reconciliation.
Mikhail Gorbachev
Soviet leader whose reforms (glasnost, perestroika) inadvertently led to the USSR's collapse.
Reflection Questions
Global perspectives: How did the Cold War look different from American, Soviet, and Non-Aligned perspectives? Who benefited and who suffered?
Decolonization: Why did some newly independent nations thrive while others struggled? What role did colonial legacies play?
Modern connections: How has globalization changed your daily life? What products, foods, or media wouldn't exist without global interconnection?
Digital age: The internet transformed society in decades. What historical parallels exist with other communication revolutions (printing press, telegraph, radio)?
Test Your Knowledge
Level 4 Assessment
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