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Civics
24-
Lecture1.1
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Lecture1.2
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Lecture1.3
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Lecture1.4
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Lecture1.5
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Lecture1.6
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Lecture1.7
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Lecture1.8
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Lecture1.9
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Lecture1.10
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Lecture1.11
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Lecture1.12
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Lecture1.13
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Lecture1.14
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Lecture1.15
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Lecture1.16
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Lecture1.17
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Lecture1.18
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Lecture1.19
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Lecture1.20
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Lecture1.21
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Lecture1.22
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Lecture1.23
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Lecture1.24
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Economics
37-
Lecture2.1
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Lecture2.2
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Lecture2.3
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Lecture2.4
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Lecture2.5
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Lecture2.6
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Lecture2.7
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Lecture2.8
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Lecture2.9
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Lecture2.10
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Lecture2.11
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Lecture2.12
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Lecture2.13
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Lecture2.14
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Lecture2.15
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Lecture2.16
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Lecture2.17
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Lecture2.18
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Lecture2.19
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Lecture2.20
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Lecture2.21
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Lecture2.22
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Lecture2.23
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Lecture2.24
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Lecture2.25
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Lecture2.26
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Lecture2.27
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Lecture2.28
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Lecture2.29
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Lecture2.30
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Lecture2.31
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Lecture2.32
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Lecture2.33
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Lecture2.34
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Lecture2.35
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Lecture2.36
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Lecture2.37
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Geography
28-
Lecture3.1
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Lecture3.2
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Lecture3.3
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Lecture3.4
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Lecture3.5
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Lecture3.6
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Lecture3.7
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Lecture3.8
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Lecture3.9
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Lecture3.10
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Lecture3.11
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Lecture3.12
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Lecture3.13
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Lecture3.14
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Lecture3.15
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Lecture3.16
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Lecture3.17
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Lecture3.18
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Lecture3.19
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Lecture3.20
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Lecture3.21
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Lecture3.22
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Lecture3.23
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Lecture3.24
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Lecture3.25
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Lecture3.26
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Lecture3.27
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Lecture3.28
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History
28-
Lecture4.1
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Lecture4.2
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Lecture4.3
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Lecture4.4
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Lecture4.5
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Lecture4.6
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Lecture4.7
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Lecture4.8
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Lecture4.9
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Lecture4.10
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Lecture4.11
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Lecture4.12
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Lecture4.13
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Lecture4.14
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Lecture4.15
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Lecture4.16
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Lecture4.17
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Lecture4.18
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Lecture4.19
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Lecture4.20
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Lecture4.21
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Lecture4.22
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Lecture4.23
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Lecture4.24
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Lecture4.25
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Lecture4.26
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Lecture4.27
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Lecture4.28
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Chapter Notes – The Making of a Global World
• Globalisation is an economic system associated with the free movement of goods, technology, ideas and people across the globe.
Section I: Pre Modern World
Silk Routes
• There are several silk routes, over land and by sea, knitting together vast regions of Asia, and linking Asia with Europe and northern Africa.
→ Famous Chinese silk cargoes used to travel through these routes.
Food Travels: Spaghetti and Potato
• Noodles travelled west from China to become spaghetti.
• Common foods such as potatoes, soya, groundnuts, maize, tomatoes, chillies, sweet potatoes were only introduced in Europe and Asia after Christopher Columbus discovered Americas.
Conquest, Disease and Trade
• Precious metals from mines of Peru and Mexico enhanced European trade with Asia.
• The Spanish conquerors used the germs of smallpox in the conquest of America.
• Until well into the eighteenth century, China and India were among the world’s richest countries.
• Until the nineteenth century, poverty and hunger were common in Europe.
Section II: The Nineteenth Century (1815-1914)
• In the late eighteenth century, growth in the population increased the demand for food grains in Britain.
• The imported food into Britain more cheaply than it could be produced within the country.
• Industrial growth took place in Britain which led to higher incomes meaning more food imports.
• It was transported by railway and by ships.
• Food is only an example. Products such as cotton, rubber, coal also had same fate.
Role of Technology
• The railways, steamships, the telegraph were important inventions that transformed nineteenth-century world.
• After the introduction of new technology, namely, refrigerated ships animals were slaughtered for food at the starting point and then transported to Europe as frozen meat.
Late nineteenth-century Colonialism
• European conquests of Asia and Africa as colonies.
• Belgium and Germany became new colonial powers.
• The US became a colonial power in the late 1890s by taking over some colonies earlier held by Spain.
Rinderpest, or the Cattle Plague
• Rinderpest is a fast spreading cattle plague which hit Africa in the late 1880s.
• It was carried by infected cattle imported from British Asia and destroyed 90 percent of the livestock.
• The colonial governments now strengthen their power and to force Africans into the labour market.
Indentured Labour Migration from India
• Indentured Labour was a bonded labourer under contract to work for an employer.
• In the nineteenth century, thousands of Indian and Chinese labourers went to work on plantations, in mines, and in road and railway construction projects around the world.
• Recruitment was done by agents by providing false information about the work and location.
• On arrival at the plantations, labourers found living and working conditions harsh.
• It was abolished in 1921.
Indian Entrepreneurs Abroad
• Indian entrepreneurs, some bankers like Nattukottai and Chettiars financed export of agriculture to Central and South-East Asia.
→ They even followed the Europeans to Africa.
• Industrial Revolution in England changed the balance of trade between England and India.
• Indian handicraft and agriculture were destroyed and Britain enjoyed a trade surplus with
India.
→ Their exports increased and imports decreased.
Section III: The Inter-war Economy
• The First World war was the first modern industrial war.
• During the war, industries were restructured to produce war-related goods.
• The war transformed the US from being an international debtor to an international creditor.
Post-war Recovery
• After the war was over, the production reduced and unemployment increased.
Rise of Mass Production and Consumption
• In the US, war recovery was quicker.
• There was a housing and consumer boom in the 1920s, which ultimately led to the Great Depression of 1929.
• Markets crashed in 1929 and led to the failure of banks and the crisis affected other countries.
→ By 1933, over 4000 banks closed and between 1929-32 about 110,000 companies collapsed.
India and the Great Depression
• India was also affected by the Great Depression.
• Indian exports and imports declined extensively, prices fell.
• Bengal jute growers suffered the most.
• Large scale migration took place from villages to towns and cities.
Section IV: Rebuilding a World Economy: The Post-war Era
• The Second World War broke out a mere two decades after the end of the First World War and once again, it led to destruction.
• After the USA and the USSR emerged as superpowers.
Post-war Settlement and the Bretton Woods Institutions
• To ensure a stable economy a framework was agreed upon at the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference held at Bretton Woods in New Hampshire, USA.
• It established the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank.
• The International Monetary Fund (IMF) to deal with external surpluses and deficits of its member nations.
• The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (popularly known as the World Bank) was set up to finance post-war reconstruction.
• The IMF and the World Bank commenced financial operations in 1947.
• Bretton Woods System was based on a fixed exchange rate.
• National currencies were pegged to the American dollar at a fixed rate.
• Decision-making in these institutions is controlled by the Western industrial powers largely by the US.