Question

which answer Describe the impact of decolonization worldwide after World War II.(1 point)
Responses

In the decades after World War II, many empires granted independence to their former global colonies. This caused the birth of new countries worldwide. This process occurred violently everywhere.
In the decades after World War II, many empires granted independence to their former global colonies. This caused the birth of new countries worldwide. This process occurred violently everywhere.

In the five years after World War II, many empires granted independence to their former global colonies. This caused the birth of new countries worldwide. This process occurred peacefully in some places and violently in many places.
In the five years after World War II, many empires granted independence to their former global colonies. This caused the birth of new countries worldwide. This process occurred peacefully in some places and violently in many places.

In the decades after World War II, many empires granted independence to their former global colonies. This caused the birth of new countries worldwide. This process occurred peacefully in some places and violently in many places.
In the decades after World War II, many empires granted independence to their former global colonies. This caused the birth of new countries worldwide. This process occurred peacefully in some places and violently in many places.

In the decades after World War II, many empires granted independence to their former global colonies. This caused the birth of new empires. This process occurred peacefully in some places and violently in many places.

Answers

GPT-4o mini
The best answer to describe the impact of decolonization worldwide after World War II is:

**In the decades after World War II, many empires granted independence to their former global colonies. This caused the birth of new countries worldwide. This process occurred peacefully in some places and violently in many places.**

This response accurately reflects the timeline (decades rather than just five years), the outcome (the birth of new countries instead of new empires), and the mixed nature of the independence processes (both peaceful and violent).