Mercantilism
Vocabulary
Scramble for Africa
Legacies of Historical Globalization
Slavery and Imperialism
100

This economic system, dominant in the 16th–18th centuries, emphasized accumulation of wealth through state control of trade and colonies. Name it.

Mercantilism

100

Define Imperialism

 Imperialism: policy of extending a country's power through conquest or economic/cultural domination.

100

What name is given to the late-19th-century rush by European powers to claim African territory?

The Scramble for Africa.

100

Give one example of a legacy of historical globalization that still affects Canada today.

 Indian Act, residential schools, land loss, ongoing socioeconomic disparities, legal disputes over treaties.

100

What was the term for the part of the triangle of trade from Africa to the America's?

The middle passage

200

 Explain one way mercantilism encouraged European imperial expansion.

Encouraged expansion to secure colonies for raw materials and markets; strengthened state power through trade monopolies.

200

 Define "Eurocentrism.

 Eurocentrism: tendency to view world history and culture from a European perspective as central or superior.

200

Name one political or diplomatic event (conference or agreement) that formalized division of Africa among European powers.

Berlin Conference

200

This is the act established the identity of those who did and did not have "indian" status. 

Indian Act

200

The term for moving manufactured goods from Europe to trade for African enslaved people who were sent to Africa to produce raw materials for Europe. 

The triangle of trade

300

Identify a mercantilist policy (e.g., tariffs, navigation acts) and describe how it benefited the imperial power.

Example: Navigation Acts — restricted colonial trade to benefit the mother country.

300

Define "depopulation"

Depopulation: significant decline in a population (often through disease, displacement, or conflict) after contact.

300

Describe one social or economic consequence of the Scramble for Africa for African societies.

 Loss of sovereignty, forced labor, disruption of local economies, new borders dividing ethnic groups.

300

Explain how residential schools are an example of imperial legacies and list one long-term consequence for Indigenous communities.

 Residential schools sought cultural assimilation; long-term effects include intergenerational trauma, loss of language and culture, social problems.

300

 Identify one lasting social or economic effect of slavery on colonized populations.

Empires depended on enslaved labor for cash crops, which financed expansion and reinforced racial ideologies to justify domination.

400

Describe how mercantilism affected Indigenous economies in a North American region after European contact.

Disrupted Indigenous trade networks; introduction of European goods altered local economies; dependence on fur trade led to overhunting in some regions, Move towards Capitalism

400

What is an "oral history," and why is it important when studying Indigenous perspectives?

Oral history: spoken accounts passed between generations; crucial for Indigenous perspectives often absent from written colonial sources.

400

What was the main resource that Belgium harvested in the Congo?

Rubber

400

How many of the Truth and Reconciliations calls to action are completed today? (over or under 50%)

under 50%

400

This small island country had the biggest and most open slave rebellion in the late 1700s early 1800s. 

Haiti

500

 how did mercantilism contributed to the long-term global trade and economic inequality.

Created colonial trade patterns favoring Europe and laid groundwork for unequal exchange of goods

500

Genocide

The intentional eradication or displacement of a race, ethnicity or religion

500

What was the system that institutionalized racism in South Africa?

apartheid

500

The term for the system that forcefully removed Indigenous children into the foster system? 

60's scoop

500

The country that received almost half of the enslaved people from Africa

Brazil