The document provides an overview of key events in World War II in both the European and Pacific theaters from 1937-1945. It discusses Japanese and German expansionism leading up to the war, as well as major battles such as Pearl Harbor, Midway, Normandy, Stalingrad, and Berlin. Key turning points included the US entering the war at Pearl Harbor, the Soviet victory at Stalingrad, the Allied invasions of Italy and Normandy, and the Allied takeover of Berlin. The document also outlines Japan's surrender following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Learn about the 2nd World War. Instigators, Major Events during this time period and the effects/ ending are covered here.
Not mine. My Professor made this.
the most comprehensive and concise presentation on world war 2.It is written in very complex English By qCet Sahiwal a group of excellence and knowledge .
Learn about the 2nd World War. Instigators, Major Events during this time period and the effects/ ending are covered here.
Not mine. My Professor made this.
the most comprehensive and concise presentation on world war 2.It is written in very complex English By qCet Sahiwal a group of excellence and knowledge .
Found at http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&ved=0CC8QFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.myhistoryclass.net%2Fpowerpoint%2Fchapter_17_powerpt.ppt&ei=r3BhU9rhMKfKsQTFi4CwBA&usg=AFQjCNHjwTnHrPt4eeMySYNnhttevFTJEQ&bvm=bv.65636070,d.cWc&cad=rja
Added in some slides and information
Found at http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&ved=0CC8QFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.myhistoryclass.net%2Fpowerpoint%2Fchapter_17_powerpt.ppt&ei=r3BhU9rhMKfKsQTFi4CwBA&usg=AFQjCNHjwTnHrPt4eeMySYNnhttevFTJEQ&bvm=bv.65636070,d.cWc&cad=rja
Added in some slides and information
Political ideologies as shapers of future tourism developmentStanislav Ivanov
Purpose. The paper aims to identify the link between political ideology and the management of tourism in countries. We stipulate that the predominant political ideology in the country influences the nature and logic of state interventions in the tourism industry.
Design/methodology/approach. The paper elaborates several case studies from various countries – Bulgaria, Cyprus, Scandinavia, Russia, USA, China, Japan, Indonesia, North Korea.
Findings. Countries with predominant (neo)liberal ideology do not typically interfere in tourism regulation, while nationalism leads governments to stimulate inbound and domestic tourism. Communist ideological approaches tend to be burdensome, inhibiting growth while stressing the promotion of the socialist achievements of a country. Countries that are traditionally thought of as social democratic have been evolving in recent years to regulate tourism in ways that are more liberal in nature than social democratic.
Practical implications. Political ideologies shape the acceptability of government support for private tourist companies, legislation in field of tourism, limitation/stimulation of inbound/outbound tourist flows. For the future we expect greater politicisation of tourism, active tourism ‘wars’ between countries, greater control of governments on populations, thriving nationalism, ‘aggressive’ environmentalism.
Originality/value. This is one of the first papers to discuss the impact of the political ideology on the management of tourism at the national level.
Political Ideas and Ideologies - Law & PoliticsFaHaD .H. NooR
Ideology is a controversial political term that has often carried pejorative implications. In the social-scientific sense, a political ideology is a more or less coherent set of ideas that provides a basis for organized political action. Its central features are an account of existing power relationships, a model of a desired future, and an outline of how political change can and should be brought about. Ideologies link political theory with political practice. On one level, ideologies resemble political philosophies, in that they constitute a collection of values, theories and doctrines; that is, a distinctive world-view. On another level, however, they take the form of broad political movements, and are articulated through the activities of political leaders, parties and groups
Every ideology can be associated with a characteristic set of principles and ideas. Although these ideas 'hang together', in the sense that they interlock in distinctive ways, they are systematic or coherent only in a relative sense. All ideologies thus embody a range of rival traditions and internal tensions. Conflict within ideologies is thus sometimes more passionate than that between ideologies.
Presentation prepared for lectures on Anarchism for PS 240 Introduction to Political Theory at the University of Kentucky, Spring 2007. Dr. Christopher S. Rice, Instructor.
This is the presentation for Chapter 4 Section 2, which covers the Greek City-States of Athens and Sparta in great detail. Please use your graphic organizer.
In a May 9, 2024 paper, Juri Opitz from the University of Zurich, along with Shira Wein and Nathan Schneider form Georgetown University, discussed the importance of linguistic expertise in natural language processing (NLP) in an era dominated by large language models (LLMs).
The authors explained that while machine translation (MT) previously relied heavily on linguists, the landscape has shifted. “Linguistics is no longer front and center in the way we build NLP systems,” they said. With the emergence of LLMs, which can generate fluent text without the need for specialized modules to handle grammar or semantic coherence, the need for linguistic expertise in NLP is being questioned.
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‘वोटर्स विल मस्ट प्रीवेल’ (मतदाताओं को जीतना होगा) अभियान द्वारा जारी हेल्पलाइन नंबर, 4 जून को सुबह 7 बजे से दोपहर 12 बजे तक मतगणना प्रक्रिया में कहीं भी किसी भी तरह के उल्लंघन की रिपोर्ट करने के लिए खुला रहेगा।
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हम आग्रह करते हैं कि जो भी सत्ता में आए, वह संविधान का पालन करे, उसकी रक्षा करे और उसे बनाए रखे।" प्रस्ताव में कुल तीन प्रमुख हस्तक्षेप और उनके तंत्र भी प्रस्तुत किए गए। पहला हस्तक्षेप स्वतंत्र मीडिया को प्रोत्साहित करके, वास्तविकता पर आधारित काउंटर नैरेटिव का निर्माण करके और सत्तारूढ़ सरकार द्वारा नियोजित मनोवैज्ञानिक हेरफेर की रणनीति का मुकाबला करके लोगों द्वारा निर्धारित कथा को बनाए रखना और उस पर कार्यकरना था।
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role of women and girls in various terror groupssadiakorobi2
Women have three distinct types of involvement: direct involvement in terrorist acts; enabling of others to commit such acts; and facilitating the disengagement of others from violent or extremist groups.
1. Do Now: Comment on the following
idea, for governments, war solves
problems of control.
World War II
2. Do Now: Who was prepared for
war?
A. In Student Handout 1.1:
1. Which government spent the most on armaments
(weapons) in 1940, 1941,1943?
2. Why was the Axis alliance spending more in 1940
and 1941? Why did the Allied governments spend
more in 1943?
B. In Student Handout 1.2:
1. In 1937, which three governments spent the
largest percentage of their budgets on defense?
Which government spent the smallest percentage
on defense?
2. Using the data in all the tables, briefly explain the
global context for armaments production and
government budgets for defense from the end of
3. German Aggression: Hitler Violates
Treaty
How did Hitler break the Treaty of
Versailles?
Hitler wants to “revisit” Treaty of
Versailles
Why were France and Great Britain
originally passive towards German
aggression?
• Pro move: Map on page #857
4. Appeasement
March 7, 1936 Rhineland
“demilitarized” zone
“They’re going into their own back
garden.”
5. New Alliances
1935 Mussolini wants to re-create Roman
Empire, invades Ethiopia
1936 Germany/Italy assist Franco in Spanish Civil
War
November 1936 Anti-Comintern Pact: common
front against communism
Anschluss March 13, 1938
6. Demands and Appeasement
September 15, 1938 Sudetenland
Munich Conference “Peace in our time!”
March 1939 invade Bohemia & Moravia (W.
Czech)
Demands Polish port of Danzig
10. The Japanese Path to
War
Question:What fueled the need
for the Japanese plan to seize
other territories?
11. Answer: Resources
Think back to primary source packet with:
Tanaka, Hitler and Stalin
Big Idea: Industrialized nations require natural
resources to continue at their current pace and to
grow
What happens if you don’t have natural resources in
your own country, like Japan and Great Britain?
12. How is Japan going to get territory
needed to maintain industry?
Expansionist Policy: (class definition)
Mukden Incident September 18, 1931 Japan
disguised as Chinese soldiers blew up railway in
Japanese territory to justify taking over all of
Manchuria
Manchukuo puppet ruler 1932
13. How does the world view
Japanese expansion?
What does the League of
Nations do/say?
Manchurian Policy USA
doesn’t do anything,
condemnation abroad,
nationalism at home
Next four years: control
inner Mongolia and areas
of North China around
Beijing
14. War with China
Chiang Kai-Shek nationalist ruler more
concerned about Communists (Remember Mao)
Appeases Japan, allowed to govern area in North
China
December 1936 Chiang ended military efforts
against Communists and formed a new united
front against Japan
July 1937 clash south of Beijing
Japan seized Chinese capital of Nanjing Rape of
Nanjing
15. New Asian Order
Japan, Manchuria and China
Japan would teach Asian how to modernize
Sounds like Nazi Germany, link creates bond
Japan wants Soviet Serbia, but refrains, why?
16. Japanese Conundrum
Japan looks South, because of Nazi Soviet Non-
Aggression Pact
What’s South and who is in control?
Summer 1940 demand French Indochina
USA: economic sanctions, which Japan fears
b/c of the need for oil and scrap iron
Japan: if we have access to Indochina and the
rest of Southeast Asia, we won’t need American
resources…
17. What Were the Causes of World
War II?
Textbook page #862-863
Read all three primary sources and answer document
based questions. (This may help if you missed
Thursday 6 June)
19. Edging Towards War
The Lend-Lease Act
The US could lend or
lease arms to can
country considered
“vital to the defense of
the USA”
Example: Great
Britain
Hemispheric Defense
Zone
US Navy would patrol
the Western half of
the Atlantic Ocean
and report German
20. Japanese Strategy
Three Phases
Phase I: Surprise attacks, then
strategic defense.
Knock out US fleet; seize vital
areas; establish defensive
perimeter.
Phase II: Strengthen perimeter;
make any offensive action by the
US prohibitively costly.
Phase III: Defeat and destroy any
forces that attempt to penetrate
the perimeter.
22. Pearl Harbor
Dec. 7th, 1941
Surprise attack by the
Japanese
Sank or damaged 21
ships (including 8
battleships)
Destroyed 188
airplanes
Killed 2,403
Americans
Injured 1,178
Americans
23. Fleet Admiral Yamamoto
Fleet Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto
“The US fleet is a dagger pointed at
our throat and must be destroyed.”
“I can run wild for six months,after
that, I have no expectation of
success.”
- Yamamoto, during
discussions on the planned Pearl
Harbour Attack
24. Japanese-American Relocation
Feb. 19th, 1942 – FDR signed
an order that allowed the War
department to declare any part
of the US to be a military zone
and remove anybody they
wanted from that zone.
Secretary of War Henry
Stimson declared most of the
West Coast a military zone and
ordered all people of Japanese
ancestry into 10 internment
Camps
Korematsu v. the United States
The Supreme Court ruled that
the relocation was legal
because it was based on
“military urgency” and not race.
Ex Parte Endo – The Supreme
Court ruled that loyal Americans
can not be held against their
will.
25. Island Hopping
A term used to describe the fighting in the Pacific
U.S. and Japan would go from island to island
fighting for control
Japan controlled most of the islands in the Pacific
U.S. picked strategic islands to fight for--Why?
27. Coral Sea
First major Naval battle
First time ever two powers fought without seeing
each other
South Pacific--Northeast of Australia
Battle was considered a draw but moral victory for
U.S.
Stopped Japanese advancement
28. Midway
Island in Pacific
Turning point of the war--June 1942
U.S. showed the Japanese a false move and the
Japanese wanted to capitalize
Four carriers for Japan sank
Turning point
29. Guadalcanal—8/42-2/43
Who: US vs. Japan
Where: Island near Australia—
one of Solomon Islands
What: One of the most vicious campaigns
Japanese put up a fierce resistance
US has superior air and naval power
Results:
First time US land troops defeat Japanese
Americans are able to secure the island
30. Leyte Gulf
The biggest and greatest naval battle ever
Philippines-- 1944
The Japanese sent nearly every ship to fight
U.S. fought a heavy battle
Japan takes the greatest casualties and nearly
loses every ship
Kamikaze raids begin
31. Iwo Jima and Okinawa
Islands in the Pacific--North Northwest of Guam
Feb. 1945 and April 1945
What was the island like?
The island took over two months to secure
Heavy casualties for both sides
Site of the famous Marines raising flag
33. European Theater
Nazi Occupied most of the European continent
for almost 4 years May of 1940- summer of
1944.
Hitler goal was gain territory to create
Lebensraum or “living space” for the Third Reich.
34.
35. German Invasion of
France
Phony War- After France, Great
Britain and Germany declared war
on each other no fighting took
place for 10 months.
Both sides prepared for war.
Fortified troops along the Maginot
line.
May 10, 1940 after 10 months of
readying Germany attacked
France and the Low countries.
France only able to hold out for 2
weeks before partial surrender.
Vichy government Hitler’s puppet
government, and Free French
government.
Germany 130 infantry and 10 tank
divisions France only 40 infantry
36.
37. Battle of Britain
Summer of 1940 Rescue from Dunkirk
Followed Battle of the
Atlantic.
Complete Air war-August
1940 - May 1941.
Radar was key to British
success.
Germany failed to knock out
GB. Arguably the biggest
mistake by Hitler of WWII,
Great Britain became
staging ground for allied
invasion of Nazi occupied
Europe.
Churchill vowed “never to
surrender” & “finest hour”
speech.
38.
39. German Invasion
of USSR(June, 22 1941)
Operation Barbarossa
Hitler believed he had
crippled the Allied powers
enough in the West, he now
turned his troops toward the
East and attacked USSR.
Cold Winter, would not retreat
costly for Germany.
Stalingrad (August 1942) -->
Germany had taken over city
with house to house battles.
Russian counter-attack
became the turning point in
war, with Soviets taking back
Stalingrad.
40. Allied invasion of
North Africa (August
1942-April 1943)
Africa/Mid East a
stronghold for oil.
British troops under
General Montgomery
won decisive battle at El
Alamein and pushed
Germany (Erwin Rommel
“Desert Fox”) toward
U.S. troops under
General Patton “caught
in the pinchers:
250,000 German POWs
taken.
41. Allied invasion of Sicily and Italy
(July of 1943)
Goal to take back Nazi
occupied Europe was to
catch the German and
remaining Italian troops
in the pinchers. Up
through Italy and down
from Northern Europe.
Allied troops led by
Patton and Montgomery
forced Axis powers out of
Italy. Not many troops
captured, most retreated.
43. D-DAY
“Under Belly” strategy
failed
North Africa/Italy
Operation Overlord
June 6th, 1944
Massive Invasion of
France
Forced Germany to
fight a 3 Front War
Italy, France, Russia
44. German Retreat
After Stalingrad – the
Russians continued to
push the Germans out
of Russia through
1943 until the end of
the war in 1945.
45. Liberation of France/Paris
August 25th, 1944
After D-day , allied troops
moved quickly to push
back Nazi occupied
Europe.
By August 1944, much of
France had been taken
back.
By the end of August
U.S. and Free French
troops led by Charles de
Gaulle liberated Paris.
46. Battle of the Bulge (Fall 1944-Dec 1944)
Beginning of the end
for Hitler and
Germany.
Hitler’s last major
offensive, trying to get
to port of Antwerp
through Ardennes
Forest, this created a
bulge in the Allied
lines.
General Patton’s Army
pushed back Germany
in the dead of winter of
47. Battle of Berlin
April 1945
The Soviet Army was about to take the city of Berlin
(the German Capital).
Hitler and his close associates operated the
German War effort out of a bunker from Jan to April
1945.
Underneath of the Chancellor’s Office
55 ft below ground
Hitler totally lost control of reality
Directed non-existent armies
48. The Last Days of Hitler
April 22, 1945
Declared the German people failed him
April 29, 1945
Married Eva Braun
April 30, 1945
Hitler and Eva both committed suicide
Both bodies burned
49. Allies take Berlin:
VE Day (May 8th 1945)
*See Handout
Soviet and U.S. surround
Germany.
Question was which
country would take Berlin.
Soviets took Berlin in April
1945.
April 30th 1945 Hitler
commits suicide
May 7th 1945 Germany
surrendered.
May 8th VE day.
50. German Surrender
Battle of Berlin
Hitler committed suicide
on April 30th, 1945
The city surrendered on
May 2nd, 1945 to the
Soviet Red Army
German Surrender
Grand Admiral Karl
Doenitz(new leader of
Germany) agreed to the
unconditional surrender
May 7th, 1945 – the
unconditional surrender
is signed by Germany
51.
52. The War Ends
Iowa Jima
American bombers can now hit mainland Japan
from air bases on the island
The Manhattan Project
US secret project to make the atomic bomb
The Decision to drop the bomb
President FDR died and Vice President Harry S.
Truman became President
Decided to drop the bomb for the following reasons:
Japan Surrenders V-J Day *See Handout