2023 (Jan.): NY Regents - Global History and Geography II
By Sara Cowley
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Last updated 3 months ago
36 Questions
Note from the author:
From the New York State Education Department. The University of the State of New York REGENTS HIGH SCHOOL EXAMINATION REGENTS EXAM IN GLOBAL HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY II. Internet. Available from https://www.nysedregents.org/ghg2/123/glhg2-12023-exam.pdf; accessed 20, June, 2023.
From the New York State Education Department. The University of the State of New York REGENTS HIGH SCHOOL EXAMINATION REGENTS EXAM IN GLOBAL HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY II. Internet. Available from https://www.nysedregents.org/ghg2/123/glhg2-12023-exam.pdf; accessed 20, June, 2023.
Base your answers to questions 1 and 2 on the passage below and on your knowledge of social studies.
The Edo period followed many years of political and social upheaval. The previous division of Japanese history known as the Sengoku period (warring states period) was dominated by wars fought between various political and religious factions for the control of the country. These wars came to an end with the unification of Japan by the great generals Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi and eventually Tokugawa Ieyasu who formed Japan’s final Shogunate. Ieyasu consolidated his power through a series of social changes including the introduction of a strict class system and the tight control of the ruling daimyo families from the capital city Edo. Individuals had no legal rights and the family became very important at all social levels.…
Source: Hokusai online
Base your answers to questions 3 and 4 on the headlines below and on your knowledge of social studies.
Headlines of the 18th Century
A. “Economic Uncertainty Grips Society”
B. “King Ignores Equal Representation For All”
C. “King Executed, Terror Begins”
D. “Tax System Seen As Unfair”
Base your answers to questions 5 and 6 on the documents below and on your knowledge of social studies.
Excerpt from the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, 1789
Articles
- Men are born and remain free and equal in rights. Social distinctions may be founded only upon the general good.
- The aim of all political association is the preservation of natural and imprescriptible [inalienable] rights of man. These rights are liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression.
- The principle of all sovereignty resides essentially in the nation. No body nor individual may exercise any authority which does not proceed directly from the nation....
Source: The Avalon Project at Yale Law School
Excerpt from the Declaration of the Rights of Woman and Female Citizen, 1791
I. Woman is born free and remains equal to man in rights. Social distinctions can only be founded on common service.
II. The aim of all political associations is to preserve the natural and inalienable rights of Woman and Man: these are rights to liberty, ownership, safety, and, above all, resistance to oppression.
III. The principle of sovereignty resides in essence in the Nation, which is only the coming together of Woman and Man: authority emanating elsewhere can be exercised by no body or individual....
Source: Olympe de Gouges
Base your answers to questions 7 and 8 on the passage below and on your knowledge of social studies.
...Ivory and slaves had been the Congo’s main exports, but Leopold focused on rubber. The mass marketing of bicycles and automobiles in the 1890s greatly increased the demand for rubber and sent prices soaring. When a rubber producing vine was discovered in the rainforests of Congo in 1890, Leopold forced out the competition and acquired a monopoly on the scarce commodity. By one estimate, the Congo was producing 20,000 tons of crude rubber a year at a 900 percent profit. The high return was due largely to cheap labor....
Source: Michael Parker, Mission Crossroads, Spring 2017
Base your answers to questions 9 and 10 on the passage below and on your knowledge of social studies.
...Equally important to English agriculture was the development of new ways of raising crops and animals. About the same time that Townshend was experimenting with turnips and clover, an English farmer, Jethro Tull, introduced a new way of planting seed. In the past, farmers had scattered seed over the surface of a plowed field. Much of this seed was eaten by birds or did not take root.
Tull instead proposed planting each seed deeply into the ground and then hoeing around it. The result was a heavy crop yield because more seeds survived and flourished. Tull increased the efficiency of this process by doing the planting with horse-drawn seed drills and hoes....
This agrarian revolution, as it has been called, was every bit as important as the industrial revolution. The availability of good food, combined with improved infant survival and the disappearance of epidemics, helped more young live to adulthood and allowed adults to live longer. This meant that, by the middle of the eighteenth century, more people were having more children, and the population grew quickly thereafter....
Source: James A. Corrick, The Industrial Revolution, Lucent Books, 1998
Base your answers to questions 13 and 14 on the passage below and on your knowledge of social studies.
...Lives were indeed about to be sacrificed for the sake of the hat. As for the veiling of women, it was officially discouraged, but not banned. In any case, veiling had been largely a middle-class custom, and the middle classes discarded it. The generality of women wore long headscarves, which they drew across their faces in the presence of male strangers. The government of the republic banned headscarves in official premises, including schools, under civil service regulations. Elsewhere they were tolerated and they have remained a feature of the Turkish scene to this day, while the ban on women’s headscarves in official premises is challenged every time that official pressure is relaxed....
Source: Andrew Mango, Atatürk, The Overlook Press
Base your answers to questions 17 and 18 on the speech excerpt below and on your knowledge of social studies.
...There is one sign the Soviets can make that would be unmistakable, that would advance dramatically the cause of freedom and peace. General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization: Come here to this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate! Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!...
Source: Ronald Reagan, “Remarks on East-West Relations at the Brandenburg Gate in West Berlin,” June 12, 1987
Base your answer to question 19 on the speech excerpt below and on your knowledge of social studies.
For centuries, Europeans dominated the African continent. The white man arrogated [claimed] to himself the right to rule and to be obeyed by the non-white; his mission, he claimed, was to “civilise” Africa. Under this cloak, the Europeans robbed the continent of vast riches and inflicted unimaginable suffering on the African people....
It is clear that we must find an African solution to our problems, and that this can only be found in African unity. Divided we are weak; united, Africa could become one of the greatest forces for good in the world....
Source: Kwame Nkrumah, I Speak of Freedom, 1961
Base your answers to questions 22 and 23 on the passage below and on your knowledge of social studies.
In this interview Deng Xiaoping discusses changes to the Chinese economy.
“There is no fundamental contradiction between socialism and a market economy. The problem is how to develop the productive forces more effectively. We used to have a planned economy, but our experience over the years has proved that having a totally planned economy hampers the development of the productive forces to a certain extent. If we combine a planned economy with a market economy, we shall be in a better position to liberate the productive forces and speed up economic growth.”...
Source: Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping, Vol. 3
Base your answers to questions 24 and 25 on the quotation below and on your knowledge of social studies.
...“Our march to freedom is irreversible. We must not allow fear to stand in our way. Universal suffrage on a common voters’ role in a united democratic and non-racial South Africa is the only way to peace and racial harmony.”...
Source: Excerpt of Nelson Mandela’s speech upon his release from prison, February 11, 1990
Base your answer to question 29 on Document 1 below and on your knowledge of social studies.
Document 1
Robert Ley held several positions in Germany. He was Reich Organization Leader, responsible for much of internal party education. He was also head of the German Labor Front, the Nazi “union.” This speech was given on November 3, 1936.
***
We have accomplished enormous things in the over three years that we have been in power. I do not believe this evening would be long enough to list all the great successes that we have had. Two facts stand out: The German today has become an entirely different person! Whether worker, craftsman, farmer, or member of the middle class, we are all entirely new people! There are a few holdovers from past times, there always have to be museum pieces, after all. They will gradually die out. The broad, large, and great mass of our people has changed thoroughly. They have been transformed....
Germany has been born anew. The Führer [Hitler] said at the last party rally, as he always says, that for him the greatest miracle of the age is how people have changed. Once there was hopelessness, today there is joy and affirmation, once there was general desperation, today there is resurrection and reawakening. Once each was the enemy of his neighbor. Envy, mistrust, and hatred were everywhere; today, everyone tries to do something good for the next person, even if sometimes with too much energy and enthusiasm. Each wants to be a good comrade, loyal, friendly....
Source: Robert Ley, “Fate — I believe!,” November 3, 1936
Base your answer to question 30 on Document 2 below and on your knowledge of social studies.
Document 2
The Nuremberg Trials were held from November 20, 1945 to October 1, 1946. Judges and prosecutors from the Allied Powers, Great Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States presided over the hearings of 22 Nazi officials. The proceedings were observed by 325 newspaper, radio, and newsreel correspondents from 23 countries.
***
...The fact of the war and the course of the war, which is the central theme of our case, is history. From September 1st, 1939, when the German armies crossed the Polish frontier, until September 1942, when they met epic resistance at Stalingrad, German arms seemed invincible. Denmark and Norway, the Netherlands and France, Belgium and Luxembourg, the Balkans and Africa, Poland and the Baltic States, and parts of Russia, all had been overrun and conquered by swift, powerful, well-aimed blows. That attack on the peace of the world is the crime against international society which brings into international cognizance [understanding] crimes in its aid and preparation which otherwise might be only internal concerns. It was aggressive war, which the nations of the world had renounced. It was war in violation of treaties, by which the peace of the world was sought to be safe-guarded.
This war did not just happen—it was planned and prepared for over a long period of time and with no small skill and cunning. The world has perhaps never seen such a concentration and stimulation of the energies of any people as that which enabled Germany 20 years after it was defeated, disarmed, and dismembered to come so near carrying out its plan to dominate Europe....
Source: Robert H. Jackson, “Opening Statement before the International Military Tribunal”
Base your answer to question 32 on Document 1 below and on your knowledge of social studies.
Document 1
This poem entitled “War Girls” was published in England in 1916.
***
There’s the girl who clips your ticket for the train,
And the girl who speeds the lift [elevator] from floor to floor,
There’s the girl who does a milk-round in the rain,
And the girl who calls for orders at your door.
Strong, sensible, and fit,
They’re out to show their grit,
And tackle jobs with energy and knack.
No longer caged and penned up,
They’re going to keep their end up
Till the khaki soldier boys come marching back.
There’s the motor girl who drives a heavy van,
There’s the butcher girl who brings your joint of meat,
There’s the girl who cries ‘All fares, please!’ like a man,
And the girl who whistles taxis up the street.
Beneath each uniform
Beats a heart that’s soft and warm,
Though of canny mother-wit [common sense] they show no lack;
But a solemn statement this is,
They’ve no time for love and kisses
Till the khaki soldier-boys come marching back.
Source: Jessie Pope, “War Girls,” Poetry Foundation, 1916
Base your answer to question 33 on Document 2 below and on your knowledge of social studies.
Document 2
The German National Socialist Women’s League was created in 1931. In 1936, Emilie Muller-Zadow, a member of the National Socialist Women’s League, wrote this essay.
***
There is a growing recognition that mothers carry the destiny of their people in their hands and that the success or ruin of the nation depends on their attitude toward the vocation of motherhood.
Nation and race are facts of creation, which we, too, are called upon to share in forming and preserving. Therefore a national leadership that respects and honors its mothers is on a sound and healthy path....
The place that Adolf Hitler assigns to woman in the Third Reich corresponds to her natural and divine destiny. Limits are being set for her, which earlier she had frequently violated in a barren desire to adopt masculine traits. The value and sanctity of goals now being set for her have been unrecognized and forgotten for a long time; and due respect is now being offered to her vocation as mother of the people, in which she can and should develop her rich emotions and spiritual strengths according to eternal laws. This wake-up call of National Socialism to women is one more indication that in Germany today it is not arbitrary laws that are being issued, but rather a nation is returning to essential, eternal rules of order.
It is therefore not at all surprising that the state and party claim the education of mothers as exclusively their task and insist that all training be carried out only by National Socialists and according to the principles of National Socialism. For the way a mother sees her child, how she cares for, teaches, and forms him, the principles that she instills in him, the attitude that she demands of him, all of this is crucial for the national health, for a German morality, and for the unified overall mind-set of the future nation. . . .
Source: Emilie Muller-Zadow, “Mothers Who Give Us the Future,” 1936
Part III
(Question 35) ENDURING ISSUES ESSAY
This question is based on the accompanying documents. The question is designed to test your ability to work with historical documents. Some of these documents have been edited for the purposes of this question. As you analyze the documents, take into account the source of each document and any point of view that may be presented in the document. Keep in mind that the language and images used in a document may reflect the historical context of the time in which it was created.
Directions: Read and analyze each of the five documents and write a well-organized essay that includes an introduction, several paragraphs, and a conclusion. Support your response with relevant facts, examples, and details based on your knowledge of social studies and evidence from the documents.
An enduring issue is a challenge or problem that has been debated or discussed across time. An enduring issue is one that many societies have attempted to address with varying degrees of success.
Task:
- Identify and explain an enduring issue raised by this set of documents
- Argue why the issue you selected is significant and how it has endured across time using your knowledge of social studies and evidence from the documents
In your essay, be sure to
- Identify the enduring issue based on a historically accurate interpretation of at least three documents
- Explain the issue using relevant evidence from at least three documents
- Argue that this is a significant issue that has endured by showing:
– How the issue has affected people or has been affected by people
– How the issue has continued to be an issue or has changed over time
- Include relevant outside information from your knowledge of social studies
In developing your answer to Part III, be sure to keep these explanations in mind:
Identify—means to put a name to or to name.
Explain—means to make plain or understandable; to give reasons for or causes of; to show logical development or relationship of something.
Argue—means to provide a series of statements that provide evidence and reasons to support a conclusion.