United States (Overview) - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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IV UNITED STATES PEOPLE
When Europeans first reached North America in the 1520s, they encountered other people—Native Americans—and they also encountered a new geography.
Someimagined they were entering “a howling wilderness”—an environment filled with exotic flora and fauna but sparsely populated.
In reality, they found their way to alandmass that was widely settled.
But soon after the Europeans’ arrival, the population of the Americas plummeted, largely because Native Americans lacked immunityto smallpox, influenza, and other infectious diseases that the Europeans brought with them.
Europeans mostly by choice and Africans almost entirely by coercion cameto the western hemisphere.
However, the number of people living in what is today the continental United States did not regain the population level before Europeancontact (estimated to be 8 million to 10 million indigenous people) until the 1840s.
How did the population of the United States grow to today’s 300 million, the third largest in the world? The article United States (People) traces this growth.
It is closelyconnected with the first theme of E pluribus unum and the second theme of striving for greater democracy.
The article details the diversity of the U.S.
population as it grew from natural increase and from immigration.
More than that of any other country in the world, thepopulation of the United States has increased through repeated waves of immigration.
Immigration gives the United States its distinctive character, and each wave ofimmigration changed the ethnic, racial, and religious composition of U.S.
society.
This diversity provided a rich mingling of cultures, but it has also been a source oftension and conflict, clouding the American promise of equality, freedom, and justice, and impeding the pursuit of E pluribus unum .
The article also shows how the population of the United States has changed.
The fertility rate, for example, has fallen steadily over the past two centuries.
In thecolonial era, the average American woman gave birth to eight children; in the 1990s, she had two children.
This profound revolution in the biological history of thenation connects with another major change in U.S.
society—women working outside the home.
The connection between changing birthrates and the shifting compositionof the labor force is very powerful.
Or consider life expectancy.
People live much longer than they did in the early years of the United States, raising questions abouthow to maintain the social security system and provide care for the elderly.
This is just one example of how the people, the economy, and the government are boundtogether.
V UNITED STATES CULTURE
The American people, like all peoples, create a culture—a word that used most broadly includes everything related to a people organized in a society.
The United States(Culture) article discusses how Americans live—the communities they build, the buildings they construct, the food they eat, the clothes they wear, their sports andrecreation, celebrations, and holidays.
The article then turns to the life of the mind and the spirit—education in the United States and American arts and letters.
American culture has been influenced by the goal of E pluribus unum and by the democratization of American society.
The people who came to the United States brought their culture with them and once here, they borrowed from each other.
As the United States became the favored destination of people leaving their homelandsin search of a new country, American culture became a rich and complex blending of cultures from around the world.
Generation by generation, decade by decade,American culture has received infusions of new elements from Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
African Americans, for instance, brought forth the improvisationalmusic and rhythms of blues and jazz that became the nation’s most globally popular cultural form.
An American can savor the flavors and foods of many parts of theworld and can hardly read a novel that does not partake of regional culture or immigrant backgrounds.
Democracy has also influenced American culture, as indicated by the gradual merging of elite and popular cultures.
Nowhere has this merging had greater importancethan in education.
Before World War II (1939-1945), only a minority of Americans completed high school, and very few graduated from college.
Today, graduation fromhigh school is nearly universal, and a majority of young Americans intend to go to college.
With the dramatic increase in the amount of education they receive,Americans have become enormous consumers of books, museums, and concerts.
Never have so many people known so much about literature and the arts.
An elite no longer controls cultural expression in the United States.
Artists of various kinds argue that formal boundaries between fine art and popular art have alwaysbeen artificial, and they have dismantled older, European-based traditions in painting, sculpture, music, dance, and literature.
Many people now contribute to a myriadof cultural forms from cartoons to public-access television programs.
With creativity arising from unexpected places, American culture now reaches out to all the nation’sdiverse peoples.
This change has paralleled the extension of political rights to more people, including women and African Americans.
Just as the American economy and American political institutions have assumed an unprecedented position on the world scene, American cultural forms—from music andmovies to football and fast food to blue jeans and blues—have become international in reach.
No longer bound by geography, American culture has become anambassador of goodwill, enabling people of different nations, different religions, and different forms of government to find something in common.
VI UNITED STATES ECONOMY
The American economy produces and Americans consume more than any other economy in the world.
It also plays a pivotal role in a global economy, where theeconomies of all nations have to various degrees become interdependent.
The article United States (Economy) first describes the workings of this economy.
Forexample, it explains the four main factors governing production: natural resources, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship.
The article also discusses the goods andservices produced in the United States, the role of capital, and saving and investment in the American economy.
It details how money and financial markets work, themakeup of the labor force, how the world economy affects the American economy and vice versa, and how different types of businesses—from megacorporations tomom-and-pop grocery stores—function in the American economy.
The Economy article also describes the economy at the beginning of the 21st century.
It is closely aligned with several other articles on the United States.
The Historyarticle shows how human choices and governmental actions have resulted in the American economy of the early 21st century.
By reading the Economy and Historyarticles together, we can see how striving for a democratic society affects many economic decisions, from raising the minimum wage to adjusting tax schedules.
TheGeography article discusses the tension between robust economic development and concerns about the environment.
The Government article helps explain the role thepolitical system plays in regulating the economy and shaping economic priorities.
Many economic decisions, such as deregulating the airlines or imposing a hefty tax oncigarettes, must be decided at the polling place or in the legislative halls.
VII UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT
Much admired in most parts of the world, the system of government devised by Americans over nearly four centuries is integral to the American experience.
Like allsocieties, Americans have wrestled with timeless questions: What is the proper source of political authority? Who has the power to make and enforce rules by which allmust live? Over the course of human history, people around the globe have invented many forms of government to answer these questions: monarchy, aristocracy,fascism, communism, democracy, and even anarchism.
The American government is based on democracy—a word that is easier to use than to implement effectively..
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Liens utiles
- Volleyball World Champions Year Country Men 1949 USSR 1952 USSR 1956 Czechoslovakia 1960 USSR 1962 USSR 1966 Czechoslovakia 1970 East Germany 1974 Poland 1978 USSR 1982 USSR 1986 United States 1990 Italy 1994 Italy 1998 Italy 2002 Brazil 2006 Brazil Women 1952 USSR 1956 USSR 1960 USSR 1962 Japan 1966 Japan 1970 USSR 1974 Japan 1978 Cuba 1982 China 1986 China 1990 USSR 1994 Cuba 1998 Cuba 2002 Italy 2006 Russia Source: Fédé
- Subject: What are the impacts of racism on black people in the United States
- The Monroe Doctrine In his annual message to Congress in 1823, United States president James Monroe declared that the United States had the right to exclude foreign powers from colonizing in the western hemisphere.
- Tecumseh: "Once a Happy Race" Early in the 19th century, Governor William Henry Harrison of the Indiana Territory made a number of treaties with Native Americans that involved the ceding of land to the United States government.
- Nixon's Resignation Speech Nixon's Resignation Speech August 8, 1974 Richard Milhous Nixon was the first United States president in history to resign from office.