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World War II and the Dawn of the Nuclear Age
The Invention and Development of the Internet and Digital Computing
The Global Decolonization Movement
Advancements in Medicine and Public Health (e.g., Antibiotics and Vaccines)
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World War II and the Dawn of the Nuclear Age: World War II accelerated technological and industrial mobilization and geopolitical realignment, while the atomic bomb introduced an unprecedented strategic-nuclear era that reshaped diplomacy, deterrence, and the scale of human destructive capability.
The Invention and Development of the Internet and Digital Computing: The invention and spread of digital computing and the internet revolutionized information processing, communication, commerce, and scientific collaboration, enabling the highly connected global economy and society of today.
The Global Decolonization Movement: The global decolonization movement dismantled colonial empires, expanded national self-determination, and transformed international institutions, politics, and economic relationships across Africa, Asia, and beyond.
Advancements in Medicine and Public Health (e.g., Antibiotics and Vaccines): Breakthroughs such as antibiotics and vaccines dramatically lowered infectious disease mortality, raised life expectancy, propelled population growth and urbanization, and fundamentally changed public health and clinical medicine.
The Invention and Development of the Internet and Digital Computing: The invention and spread of digital computing and the internet revolutionized information processing, communication, commerce, and scientific collaboration, enabling the highly connected global economy and society of today.
The Global Decolonization Movement: The global decolonization movement dismantled colonial empires, expanded national self-determination, and transformed international institutions, politics, and economic relationships across Africa, Asia, and beyond.
Advancements in Medicine and Public Health (e.g., Antibiotics and Vaccines): Breakthroughs such as antibiotics and vaccines dramatically lowered infectious disease mortality, raised life expectancy, propelled population growth and urbanization, and fundamentally changed public health and clinical medicine.
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