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Changing Patterns of Life Chapter 19 Section 3
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Old Ways and New Since 1945, people in the developing world have flocked to cities to find jobs and escape rural poverty. Some people settled in shantytowns, slums on the outskirts of cities. The children in the nuclear family often rejected the parents ways and many villagers that moved to cities felt stressed and isolated. In cities, people tend to adopt western fashions and ideas. Some places tried to reject westernization. They go by the saying, “modernization without westernization.”
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Old Ways and New Cont. They welcome new technologies but preserve and keep the older ways and traditions. Village life stays mainly the same with changes such as roads, clinics, and televisions. These things can enrich life, but they also make traditions weaker. The major world religions and their offshoots still shape modern societies. Some religious reformers have been called fundamentalists because they stress what they as the fundamental, or basic, values of their faith.
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New Rights and Roles for Women After 1945s, women’s movements brought changes to both the western and the developing nations. By 1950, women had won the right to vote in most European nations. By the 1970s, the feminist movement sought greater access for women to jobs and promotions. New roles for women raised difficult social issues. New constitutions spelled out equality for women, at least on paper, but they still had less education. In places like Africa, women do almost more work than the men.
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Science and Technology In the 1940s, the first computer was made and by 2000, a huge computer network linked everyone. E-commerce, buying and selling on the internet, contributed to economic growth and vitality. In the postwar era, the medical field achieved amazing successes, but advances in medicine were costly and limited to countries that could afford them. Genetic engineering has also been a new advance in science, that raises a lot of ethical questions about whether life should be changed or created. In 1957, the space age started and in 1969, the United States landed the first man on the moon.
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Science and Technology Cont. During the 1960s, scientists touched off the Green Revolution by developing new kinds of grain that produced more food per acre. It only succeeded in areas with regular moisture and required pesticides and irrigation systems that were too expensive for most farmers to afford. Technology has improved life everywhere and created many new kinds of jobs, but also threatens others.
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A New Global Culture The driving force behind this global culture has been the United States. Some places balance western and nonwestern traditions, but critics have compared the westernization of cultures to a foreign invasion. In the last 100 years, the western world has gained a new appreciation for the arts of other civilizations. Global interest in the arts has led nations to value and protect ancient cultural treasures.
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Looking Ahead Many recent trades and issues emerged long before1945 and will continue for decades. At the same time, new issues and new conflicts will almost certainly take shape. Global Interests
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Vocabulary Green Revolution- when they tried to develop new kinds of rice and other grains that yielded more food per acre Shantytown- slums on the outskirts of cities Fundamentalist- religious reformers Liberation Theology- Urging the church to take a more active role in opposing the social conditions that contribute to poverty Feminist Movement- equal pay for equal work E-Commerce- buying and selling on the internet Genetic Engineering- altering the chemical code carried by living things
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