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Ideologies of the 19th Century

FEMINISM

First Wave

19th century - 20th century

Second Wave

1960s -1980s

Third Wave

1990s - Today

Focus on

Women's Suffrage

Educational Opportunities for Women

Property Ownership

Employment Opportunities

First Wave

1902 Foot Binding outlawed

Liberalism

Classical Liberalism is much different than the ideas associated with today.

WE WANT CHANGE!

Liberals wanted to leave behind the traditional ways of doing things.

Old Days:

* King controlled everything.

* Rights were limited.

* Wealth was controlled by a few elite.

* Control of the Traditional Church

New Ways:

* Freedom

* Natural Rights

*Democracy

* Ownership of Property

* new Ideas About Religion

John Locke

Classical Conservatism

A political philosophy in which stability of society, law and order, and customs and traditions are paramount. Skeptical of plans to remodel human society after an ideological model. Also proposes that elites have a right to rule but are responsible for the welfare of others.

Nationalism

Nationalists believe their shared interests supersede all other individual or group interests. They oppose globalism and empires. They also rally against any philosophy, such as religion, that supersedes national loyalties. They are not necessarily militaristic but quickly become so if threatened.

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The military will intercede if necessary.

a policy of extending a country's power and influence through diplomacy or military force

Imperialism

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socialism

a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.

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Social Darwinism

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believed that the process of natural selection acting on variations in the population would result in the survival of the best competitors and in continuing improvement in the population. Reasoned that the poor were “naturally” weak and unfit and it would be an error to allow the weak of the species to continue to breed. They believed that the dictum “survival of the fittest” (a term coined not by Charles Darwin but by sociologist Herbert Spencer) meant that only the fittest should survive.^2

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