World History New Myhistorylab Standalone Access Card
Cram101 Textbook Outlines gives all of the outlines, highlights, notes for your textbook with optional online practice tests. Only Cram101 Outlines are Textbook Specific. Cram101 is NOT the Textbook.
This Third Edition strongly emphasizes thematic connections between societies and events, making it easy for new history students to absorb a wide array of details, dates, and events.
The authors' focus on connections offers a useful and compelling framework for understanding how and why peoples and societies change over time. Note: MyHistoryLab does not come automatically packaged with this text.
Wilson Center, http://www.wil soncenter.org/program/cold-war-international-history-project. Washington, DC, 1991–2018. ... Cold War in the High Himalayas: The USA, China, and South Asia in the 1950s. New York, 1999. Ang Cheng Guan.
This is the eBook of the printed book and may not include any media, website access codes, or print supplements that may come packaged with the bound book.
This comprehensive text provides a balanced survey of the Cold War in a genuinely global framework.
Connections: A World History
This Third Edition strongly emphasizes thematic connections between societies and events, making it easy for new history students to absorb a wide array of details, dates, and events.
This comprehensive collection of carefully edited documents—speeches, treaties, statements, and articles—traces the rise and fall of the Cold War.
This Third Edition strongly emphasizes thematic connections between societies and events, making it easy for new history students to absorb a wide array of details, dates, and events.
This Third Edition strongly emphasizes thematic connections between societies and events, making it easy for new history students to absorb a wide array of details, dates, and events.
This Third Edition strongly emphasizes thematic connections between societies and events, making it easy for new history students to absorb a wide array of details, dates, and events.
This concise and engaging text argues that the Cold War and anti-colonial movements should properly be studied and taught together, not as distinct developments, but rather as interwoven aspects of a complex global transformation.
The authors' focus on connections offers a useful and compelling framework for understanding how and why peoples and societies change over time. Note: MyHistoryLab does not come automatically packaged with this text.