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Learning Objectives
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Chapter 17 teaches students about:

  • The causes of WWI, which ranged from the crisis in the Balkans that set off the war to the tensions created by the alliance system and Germany's ambitions.
  • The course of the war on land and at sea, resulting in a stalemate for several years.
  • The withdrawal of the Russians from the conflict.
  • The United States' renunciation of neutrality and subsequent mobilization, which turned the tide against the Germans.
  • The collapse of the German empire and the establishment of the Weimar Republic.
  • The impact of the war on the role of government in national economies, and the increasing adherence to the idea of economic equality.
  • The shift in economic growth and influence globally as Europe suffered from inflation while the United States and other regions rapidly industrialized.
  • The sense of crisis in the ideals of progress and Western civilization provoked by the experiences of war.
  • Woodrow Wilson's dream of creating an international regulatory body to prevent future conflicts.
  • Allied demands of reparations and German resistance to such demands during the peace negotiations.
  • The weaknesses of the treaty of Versailles.







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