Asked by unkown

Use the map to answer the question.

A map of South Africa shows the 10 different homelands as designated by the government as part of its system of apartheid.

Examine the map. How was spatial interaction disrupted in this place, historically?

(1 point)
Responses

Travel to Lesotho and Swaziland was increasingly restricted over the course of the twentieth century, leading to political tensions.

Travel to Lesotho and Swaziland was increasingly restricted over the course of the twentieth century, leading to political tensions.

Modern telecommunications systems diffused to the shaded areas in this country before they were present anywhere else in the region.

Modern telecommunications systems diffused to the shaded areas in this country before they were present anywhere else in the region.

A series of colonial governments created instability and disrupted transportation networks in the shaded areas of this country.

A series of colonial governments created instability and disrupted transportation networks in the shaded areas of this country.

A legal practice of racial segregation was in place for much of the twentieth century, restricting blacks to residence in the shaded areas.

A legal practice of racial segregation was in place for much of the twentieth century, restricting blacks to residence in the shaded areas.

The nationalist government in place during World War II sided with the Axis powers and lost the territory in the shaded areas to Britain.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
A legal practice of racial segregation was in place for much of the twentieth century, restricting blacks to residence in the shaded areas.

(These shaded areas are the apartheid-era "homelands" or Bantustans, created to limit Black residence and movement and disrupt spatial interaction.)