Innovation
Change
Identity
Movement
Review
Ideas
100

The Industrial Revolution began in this industry, where machines were created to save on labor and meet the increasing high demand across society.

Textiles

100

The Industrial Revolution led to an overall increase or decrease when it came to the demand for skilled workers.

Descrease

100

The Sadler Report was a majoe committee finding by Parliament that exposed the horrific working conditions endured by this group.

Children
100

Farmers and workers moved to urban areas like cities once jobs became scarce in these areas; which are less populated and refers to the countryside.

Rural

100

Economic opportunity, safety, and education are these kind of factors.

Pull Factors

100

Meaing "let them do it", this French term is used to describe an economic approach where government does not interfere with businesses.

Laissez Faire

200

The abundance of coal in England allowed the country to fuel machines using this power source.

Steam 

200
The four-year crop rotation system, seed drill, steel plow, mechanical reaper, grain cradle and the horse collar revolutionized this sector of the economy, contributing to the labor influx needed for industrialization.

Agriculture

200

People from this country was barred from entering the United States from 1882 to 1943.

China

200
In the 19th and early 20th century, this theory was used to articulate the idea of the United States having many cultures, but one distinct identity. This theory is criticized in modern culture because promotes assimilation.

Melting Pot Theory

200

This event in Europe led to the decline of serfdom.

The Black Death

200

This economic system includes the elements of supply and demand, private property, and competition.

Capitalism.

300

Guglielmo Marconi invented this method of communication; which allowed for ships to talk with stations on land.

Radio

300

This new world food was instrumental in providing food for workers and families in cities; leading to a major population boom in the 1800s.

Potato

300
In their goal to win the vote, these women in Britain used extreme measures that included destruction of property, arson, and protests to get media attention.

Suffragettes

300

Immigration led to the rise this belief, where people born in the country should be prioritized over foreigners through law and societal norms.

Nativism

300

Samuel Morse created a system of communication using this André-Marie Ampère's invention that sent electromagnetic pulses between two stations. This tool would later help empires coordinate their control over their colonies.

Telegraph

300

This philosopher and economist argued that the only way to destroy social classes was for the proletariat (working class) would seize the means of production in a violent revolution.

Karl Marx

400

This process created by Eli Whitney led to the birth of mass production, which allowed for goods to be made quicker and fixed easier.

Interchangeable Parts

400

Lewis Hine and Jacob Riis used this tool to expose the horribile conditions of labor and urban living during the 19th century.

Photography

400

Collective bargaining, strikes, and lockouts are all tools used by these groups that fight for better working conditions.

Labor Unions

400

This is the process of more people living in an area.

Urbanization

400

This canal was instrumental for the British Empire to have quicker access to goods from India.

The Suez Canal

400

Marx believed that communism was necessary because the middle class exploited the working class and used their ownership as a way to gain power at the expense of the laborers. He called the middle class this word, which is French for "town dweller" and attributed to the ubran elites who overthrew Louis XIV in the French Revolution.

Bourgeoisie

500

This process allowed for the production of efficient steel, leading to the construction of railroads, bridges, and skyscrapers.

Bessemer

500
Factories replaced these industries, where labor was subcontracted to people who worked mainly in their homes. This was also known as the "putting-out" system.

Cottage Industries

500

When a diverse society promotes equal respect and standing for all cultural traditions and customs.

Multiculturalism

500

The fear of something foreign.

Xenophobia

500

This Asian country embraced industrialization; preventing them from being imperialized, and contributing to the growth of their own empire through militarism.

Japan

500

The wealthy, powerful, and elitists often used this theory to explain why some people were superior and others were inferior. Applying the theory of "Survival of the Fittest" to humans.

Social Darwinism

600
This French chemist discovered the link between germs and disease. He also figured out that heat can kill bacteria; leading to a revolutionary process that made drinks safer.

Louis Pasteur

600

England passed Corn Laws, which made the price of importing grain more expensive -- thus forcing domestic markets to buy products made and grown in England. This taxes on imports are known as this.

Tariffs

600

Immigration was one of the major reasons behind this country's decisions to leave the European Union; also known as Brexit.

The United Kingdom
600

This movement closed off communal farmlands in Europe; most of it going to the grazing of sheep. Causing many farmers to migrate to urban areas in search for factory jobs.

The Enclosure Movement

600

John Snow was able to use mapping to discover a breakout of this disease; which plagued London in the 1800's due to poor sanitation throughout the city.

Cholera

600
This economic approach argues that the problems of capitalism can be fixed with the public ownership of key industries.

Socialism

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