NSW · NESAQ&A
Modern HistoryQ&A by dot point
A short Q&A bank for every NSW Modern History syllabus dot point. Each question and answer is drawn directly from our worked dot-point page, so you can scan key concepts before opening the long-form answer.
Section IV (Change in the Modern World): The Cold War 1945-1991
- The extension of the Cold War to Asia, including the communist victory in the Chinese Civil War (October 1949), the Sino-Soviet Treaty of 1950, and the impact on American policy in Asia5Q&A pairs
- The Korean War (June 1950 to July 1953), including the role of the United Nations, the intervention of the People's Republic of China, and the impact on superpower relations and the militarisation of containment6Q&A pairs
- The Berlin Crisis and the construction of the Berlin Wall (13 August 1961), including the role of Khrushchev, the Kennedy administration's response, and the consolidation of the German division6Q&A pairs
- The Cuban Missile Crisis (October 1962), including the origins of the crisis, the role of Kennedy and Khrushchev, the resolution, and the impact on superpower relations4Q&A pairs
- Detente in the 1970s, including the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I 1972, SALT II 1979), the Helsinki Accords (August 1975), and the collapse of detente by the end of the decade5Q&A pairs
- The dissolution of the Soviet Union (1991), including the rise of nationalism in the republics, the August 1991 coup attempt, the rise of Yeltsin, and the formal end of the USSR on 25 December 19915Q&A pairs
- The end of the Cold War, including Gorbachev's policies of glasnost and perestroika, the New Thinking in foreign policy, the INF Treaty (December 1987), and the changing superpower relationship7Q&A pairs
- The revolutions of 1989, including the fall of the Berlin Wall (9 November 1989), the round-table negotiations in Poland and Hungary, and the collapse of communist regimes across Eastern Europe4Q&A pairs
- Historical interpretations of the Cold War, including the orthodox, revisionist, and post-revisionist schools, and the impact of post-1991 archival access7Q&A pairs
- The Berlin Blockade (June 1948 to May 1949) and Airlift, the formation of NATO (April 1949), and the division of Germany into the Federal Republic (May 1949) and the German Democratic Republic (October 1949)5Q&A pairs
- The rhetoric and ideology of the early Cold War, including Kennan's Long Telegram (February 1946), Churchill's Iron Curtain speech (March 1946), and the doctrine of containment7Q&A pairs
- The development of the Cold War, including the Truman Doctrine (March 1947), the Marshall Plan (June 1947), the response of the USSR through Cominform and Comecon, and the consolidation of the two blocs6Q&A pairs
- The origins of the Cold War, including ideological differences, the wartime conferences at Yalta (February 1945) and Potsdam (July to August 1945), and the breakdown of the Grand Alliance6Q&A pairs
- Proxy wars and the Cold War in the Third World, including the Vietnam War (1965 to 1973) and the Soviet war in Afghanistan (1979 to 1989), and their impact on the superpowers6Q&A pairs
Section III (Peace and Conflict): Conflict in the Gulf 1980-2011
- The course and immediate outcome of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, including the Coalition order of battle, the three-week ground campaign, the fall of Baghdad on 9 April 2003, the looting and breakdown of order, and the early occupation under the Coalition Provisional Authority7Q&A pairs
- The impact of the 11 September 2001 attacks and the War on Terror on US policy in the Gulf, including the Bush Doctrine, the invasion of Afghanistan, the Axis of Evil speech, and the road to the 2003 Iraq War5Q&A pairs
- The role of President George H. W. Bush (Bush 41), including the formation of the 35-nation Coalition, the diplomacy at the United Nations, the decision to end Desert Storm with Saddam in power, and the New World Order rhetoric of 1990 to 199212Q&A pairs
- The role of President George W. Bush (Bush 43), including the Vulcans, the case for war, UN Resolution 1441, the Powell UN address, the absence of a second resolution, and the decision for invasion14Q&A pairs
- The impact of the Gulf conflicts on civilians, including the Iran-Iraq War's casualties, the Halabja chemical attack, the 1991 Shia and Kurdish uprisings, sanctions-era humanitarian crisis, the Iraqi insurgency casualties, and the refugee flows15Q&A pairs
- The course and consequences of the Iraqi insurgency and sectarian civil war 2003 to 2008, including the Sunni insurgency, al-Qaeda in Iraq, the bombing of the al-Askari shrine, the Shia militias, the 2007 Surge, and the Sons of Iraq Awakening13Q&A pairs
- The course and consequences of the Iran-Iraq War 1980 to 1988, including its origins, the phases of the war, the use of chemical weapons, the War of the Cities, the Tanker War and superpower involvement, and the UN ceasefire of 19884Q&A pairs
- The origins and consequences of the Iranian Revolution 1979, including the fall of the Shah, the role of Ayatollah Khomeini, the hostage crisis, and the impact on regional and superpower politics4Q&A pairs
- The causes and immediate consequences of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait on 2 August 1990, including the post-war debt crisis, the role of the United Nations, and the formation of the Coalition11Q&A pairs
- The role of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, including his exile, his return in 1979, the doctrine of velayat-e faqih, his conduct of the Iran-Iraq War, and his foreign-policy legacy after his death in 19894Q&A pairs
- The role of the media and the changing nature of warfare in the Gulf, including the CNN effect, embedded reporting, precision-guided weapons, stealth aircraft, drones, asymmetric warfare, IEDs, and the rise of Al Jazeera15Q&A pairs
- The course and outcome of Operation Desert Storm 1991, including the air campaign, the ground offensive, the role of new military technology, the Highway of Death, and the decision to end the war on 28 February 19917Q&A pairs
- The role of oil and OPEC in the conflicts of the Gulf, including the strategic importance of Gulf oil, oil prices as a cause and consequence of conflict, the Tanker War, attacks on oil infrastructure, and the security guarantees that the major powers extended4Q&A pairs
- The role of Saddam Hussein, including his rise to power, the nature of the Baathist regime, the cult of personality, the repression of the Kurds and Shia, and his decisions for war in 1980, 1990 and 20039Q&A pairs
- The international response to Iraq 1991 to 2003, including UN sanctions, the No-Fly Zones, UNSCOM weapons inspections, the humanitarian consequences, the Oil-for-Food Programme, and the failure of containment8Q&A pairs
- The negotiation of the Status of Forces Agreement, the Obama withdrawal timeline, the final US departure on 18 December 2011, the costs of the war, and the unstable Iraq inherited by the Maliki government11Q&A pairs
Core Study: Power and Authority in the Modern World 1919-1946
- The policy of appeasement and the road to war, including the Anschluss (1938), Munich Agreement (1938), the Nazi-Soviet Pact (1939), and the invasion of Poland5Q&A pairs
- The conduct of World War II and the post-war settlement, including the major turning points 1939 to 1945, the Holocaust, the use of the atomic bomb, and the Nuremberg Trials10Q&A pairs
- The conditions that gave rise to dictatorship in Germany, including Hitler's rise to power 1919 to 30 January 1933, the failures of the Weimar Republic, and the collapse of parliamentary politics5Q&A pairs
- The League of Nations and the system of collective security, including the major crises of the 1930s (Manchuria 1931, Abyssinia 1935, Rhineland 1936) and the reasons for the League's failure3Q&A pairs
- The conditions that gave rise to dictatorship in Italy, including Mussolini's rise to power 1919 to 1925 and the establishment of the Fascist state4Q&A pairs
- The methods by which the Nazi regime consolidated power between January 1933 and August 1934, including the Reichstag Fire, the Enabling Act, Gleichschaltung, the Night of the Long Knives, and the death of Hindenburg4Q&A pairs
- The development of Nazi racial policy 1933 to 1939, including the Nuremberg Laws (1935) and Kristallnacht (1938), and the historiographical debate over the path to the Holocaust7Q&A pairs
- The conditions that gave rise to dictatorship in the USSR, including Stalin's rise to power after Lenin's death in 1924 and his consolidation through the late 1920s4Q&A pairs
- The nature of the Nazi state 1933 to 1939, including the role of terror and propaganda, the polycratic structure of government, economic policy, and the impact on women, youth, and churches7Q&A pairs
- The peace treaties that ended World War I, including the Treaty of Versailles, and the impact of these settlements on Germany and on the post-war international order8Q&A pairs
Section III (Peace and Conflict): Conflict in Indochina 1954-1979
- The anti-war movement in the United States and Australia, the role of the media, including television coverage of the war and the publication of the Pentagon Papers, the Moratorium movement, and the impact of events such as the Kent State shootings5Q&A pairs
- The nature and conduct of the war from 1965 to 1968, including the strategies of attrition and search and destroy, the use of air power and Operation Rolling Thunder, the role of Australia and other allies, and the experience of combatants and civilians5Q&A pairs
- The nature and policies of the Diem regime in South Vietnam, including the failure to hold the 1956 elections, the strategic hamlet program, the Buddhist crisis, and the coup of November 19638Q&A pairs
- The collapse of South Vietnam in 1975, including the failure of the Paris Peace Accords, the final offensive of the People's Army of Vietnam, the fall of Saigon on 30 April 1975, and the reunification of Vietnam6Q&A pairs
- The role of Ho Chi Minh and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, including the consolidation of the North, support for the National Liberation Front, the Ho Chi Minh Trail, and the relationship with the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China8Q&A pairs
- The impact of the conflict on civilians and Indochinese society, including the human cost of the war, the use of chemical weapons and Agent Orange, the experience of refugees and boat people, and the long-term legacies for Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos5Q&A pairs
- The extension of the conflict to Cambodia, the rise of the Khmer Rouge under Pol Pot, the fall of Phnom Penh on 17 April 1975, the nature and policies of Democratic Kampuchea, and the impact on Cambodian society6Q&A pairs
- The nature of the conflict, including the use of guerrilla and conventional warfare, the strategies of the People's Army of Vietnam and the National Liberation Front, and the strategies of the United States, the Republic of Vietnam, and the allied forces6Q&A pairs
- The origins of the conflict, including French colonial rule, the rise of Vietnamese nationalism, the role of Ho Chi Minh and the Viet Minh, the First Indochina War 1946 to 1954, the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu, and the Geneva Conference and Geneva Accords 19544Q&A pairs
- The role of China and the Soviet Union in the conflict, including their support for the DRV and the NLF, the impact of the Sino-Soviet split, and the strategic context of the Cold War in Asia4Q&A pairs
- The Tet Offensive of January to March 1968, including the planning by the DRV and the NLF, the attacks on Saigon and Hue, the response of the United States and the Republic of Vietnam, and the political and strategic consequences5Q&A pairs
- The reasons for and nature of United States involvement, including the policy of containment, the domino theory, the Gulf of Tonkin incident and Resolution of August 1964, and the deployment of ground troops from 19654Q&A pairs
- The Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in December 1978, the overthrow of the Khmer Rouge and the establishment of the People's Republic of Kampuchea, the Sino-Vietnamese war of February to March 1979, and the end of the conflict in Indochina6Q&A pairs
- The policy of Vietnamisation, the expansion of the war into Cambodia and Laos, the role of Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho, the Easter Offensive and Linebacker bombings of 1972, and the Paris Peace Accords of January 19738Q&A pairs
Section II (National Study): China 1927-1949
- The Chinese Civil War 1945 to 1949, including the strategic balance at 1946, the role of Manchuria, the three decisive campaigns of 1948 to 1949, and the reasons for the Communist victory15Q&A pairs
- The founding of the People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949, including the Common Programme, the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the new state structure, and the international recognition of the PRC5Q&A pairs
- The Japanese invasion of Manchuria 1931, including the Mukden Incident, the creation of Manchukuo, the failure of the League of Nations, and the impact on Chiang Kai-shek's strategy of internal pacification first8Q&A pairs
- The end of the Second Sino-Japanese War and the post-war balance, including the Soviet invasion of Manchuria, the race for territory, the Chongqing negotiations, and the Marshall Mission6Q&A pairs
- The Jiangxi Soviet 1928 to 1934 and the development of Communist guerrilla strategy, including the role of Mao Zedong, the land reform programme, and the KMT encirclement campaigns6Q&A pairs
- The defeat of the KMT and the retreat to Taiwan 1949, including the reasons for the collapse, the evacuation of personnel, treasure, and military equipment, and the establishment of Chiang's authoritarian regime on Taiwan10Q&A pairs
- The Long March 1934 to 1935 and the emergence of Mao Zedong as Communist leader, including the Zunyi Conference, the relationship with Zhang Guotao, and the establishment of the Yan'an base area7Q&A pairs
- The Marco Polo Bridge Incident of July 1937 and the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War, including the fall of Shanghai and Nanjing, the Rape of Nanjing, the move of the capital to Chongqing, and the stalemate of 1938 to 19418Q&A pairs
- The Nanjing Decade 1928 to 1937 and the achievements and failures of the Nationalist government, including state-building, economic modernisation, the New Life Movement, and the limits of KMT control7Q&A pairs
- The Northern Expedition 1926 to 1928 and the consolidation of Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist government, including the role of the First United Front, the Whampoa Military Academy, the alliance with the warlords, and the establishment of the Nanjing decade6Q&A pairs
- The Second United Front 1937 to 1945, including the Xi'an Incident, the New Fourth Army Incident, and the deterioration of KMT-CCP relations during the war with Japan8Q&A pairs
- The Shanghai Massacre of April 1927 and the destruction of the First United Front, including the role of the Green Gang, the Wuhan-Nanjing split, and the impact on the Chinese Communist Party4Q&A pairs
- The Yan'an period 1937 to 1947 and Communist mass mobilisation, including land reform, the Rectification Movement, the development of Mao Zedong Thought, and the growth of the Communist base areas7Q&A pairs
Section II (National Study): Germany 1918-1939
- The collapse of the Weimar Republic 1929 to 1933, including the impact of the Great Depression, the rule by presidential decree under Bruning, Papen, and Schleicher, and the appointment of Hitler as Chancellor on 30 January 19337Q&A pairs
- The Nazi consolidation of power and the nature of the Nazi state 1933 to 1939, including the Reichstag Fire Decree, the Enabling Act, the Night of the Long Knives, the role of the SS, Gestapo, and SD, and the role of propaganda under Goebbels5Q&A pairs
- Nazi economic policy 1933 to 1939, including the work-creation programmes under Schacht, the Mefo bills, the Four-Year Plan of 1936 under Goering, rearmament, autarky, and the limits of the economy by 19393Q&A pairs
- Nazi foreign policy 1933 to 1939, including withdrawal from the League, conscription and rearmament, the Rhineland, the Anschluss, the Munich Agreement, the Nazi-Soviet Pact, and the invasion of Poland7Q&A pairs
- Nazi social and racial policy 1933 to 1939, including the position of women, youth, and churches, the Nuremberg Laws of 1935, the persecution of Jews and other minorities, and Kristallnacht of November 19385Q&A pairs
- The Stresemann era 1924 to 1929, including the Dawes and Young Plans, the Locarno Treaties, League of Nations membership, the cultural life of the Weimar Republic, and the limits of recovery7Q&A pairs
- The emergence of the Weimar Republic 1918 to 1924, including the collapse of imperial Germany, the impact of WWI, the Treaty of Versailles, the Weimar Constitution, and the political and economic crises of 1918 to 19234Q&A pairs
Section II (National Study): Indonesia 1942-2005
- The 30 September 1965 coup attempt (G30S) and the anti-Communist massacres of 1965 to 1966, including the killing of the generals, the role of Suharto, and the destruction of the PKI5Q&A pairs
- The 1997 Asian Financial Crisis and the fall of Suharto in May 1998, including the rupiah collapse, the IMF programme, the May 1998 riots, student protests, and Suharto's resignation5Q&A pairs
- Terrorism and conflict in early Reformasi Indonesia, including the 12 October 2002 Bali bombing, the response to Jemaah Islamiyah, the Aceh insurgency, the December 2004 tsunami, and the 2005 Helsinki Memorandum of Understanding8Q&A pairs
- The Indonesian occupation of East Timor 1975 to 1999, including the December 1975 invasion, annexation as the 27th province, the resistance under FRETILIN, the Santa Cruz massacre, and the 1999 referendum6Q&A pairs
- Sukarno's Guided Democracy 1957 to 1965, including the abandonment of parliamentary democracy, the role of NASAKOM (Nationalism, Religion, Communism), the West Irian campaign, and the deepening economic crisis7Q&A pairs
- The Indonesian National Revolution 1945 to 1949, including the Battle of Surabaya, Dutch police actions, the Renville and Linggadjati agreements, the Madiun Affair, and the transfer of sovereignty at the Round Table Conference9Q&A pairs
- The nature and impact of the Japanese occupation of the Netherlands East Indies 1942 to 1945, including the collapse of Dutch rule, the use of Indonesian nationalists, the formation of PETA, romusha labour, and Japanese sponsorship of the independence movement5Q&A pairs
- Konfrontasi (Confrontation) with Malaysia 1963 to 1966, including the Dwikora command, the Borneo campaigns, the role of the PKI, and the consequences for the Indonesian economy6Q&A pairs
- The proclamation of independence on 17 August 1945, including the role of Sukarno and Hatta, the pemuda pressure at Rengasdengklok, the drafting of the proclamation, and the establishment of the Republic8Q&A pairs
- The Reformasi period 1998 to 2004, including Habibie's openings, the 1999 election, the Wahid and Megawati presidencies, constitutional amendments, decentralisation, and the limits of democratisation6Q&A pairs
- Suharto's New Order 1967 to 1998, including dwifungsi, GOLKAR, Pancasila as sole foundation (asas tunggal), the Berkeley Mafia and economic development, and the limits of pembangunan5Q&A pairs
- The 2004 election and the establishment of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's presidency, including the consolidation of Indonesian democracy, civil-military relations, and the conclusion of the national study period7Q&A pairs
Section IV (Peace and Conflict): Conflict in Europe 1935-1945
- The course of the European war 1939 to 1941, including the invasion of Poland, the Phoney War, the German conquest of Western Europe in 1940, the Battle of Britain, and Operation Barbarossa of June 19417Q&A pairs
- The defeat of Germany 1944 to 1945, including Operation Bagration, the D-Day landings, the liberation of Western Europe, the Soviet advance, the Battle of the Bulge, and the Battle of Berlin6Q&A pairs
- The growth of European tensions 1935 to 1939, including the failure of the League and collective security, the Italian invasion of Abyssinia, the Spanish Civil War, the policy of appeasement, the Nazi-Soviet Pact, and the invasion of Poland8Q&A pairs
- The impact of the war on civilians 1939 to 1945, including aerial bombing of cities, occupation policies and resistance, the Holocaust, displacement and forced labour, and the experience of women and children on the home front9Q&A pairs
- The reasons for Allied victory in Europe, including the economic, industrial, and demographic advantages of the Allies, the strategic decisions of the Grand Alliance, the role of intelligence and technology, and the contributions of the Soviet Union, the United States, and Britain4Q&A pairs
- The turning points of the European war 1942 to 1943, including El Alamein, Operation Torch, Stalingrad, Kursk, the Battle of the Atlantic, and the strategic bombing offensive7Q&A pairs
Section III (Personalities): Albert Speer, Hitler's Architect and Minister of Armaments
- Speer's knowledge of and complicity in the Final Solution, including the GBI Berlin clearances, the Posen Conference of October 1943, his presence at the SS economic conferences, and the post-war evidence of the Walters Letter and Brechtken's research5Q&A pairs
- Speer's role as Hitler's architect 1933 to 1942, including the Nuremberg Party rally designs, the Cathedral of Light, the New Reich Chancellery, the Welthauptstadt Germania project, and the political function of monumental architecture6Q&A pairs
- Speer's role as Minister of Armaments and War Production 1942 to 1945, including the rationalisation of production, the use of forced labour, the relationship with Sauckel, and the production peak of mid-19446Q&A pairs
- Speer's background and rise to prominence, including his middle-class upbringing, his architectural training, his joining of the Nazi Party in 1931, and his ascent through Hitler's personal patronage to the role of First Architect of the Reich8Q&A pairs
- The historiography and modern interpretations of Albert Speer, including the early postwar acceptance of the 'good Nazi' persona, the Sereny and Fest revisions of the 1990s, the archival opening of the 2000s, and the decisive reassessment by Brechtken in 20174Q&A pairs
- Speer's trial at Nuremberg and his Spandau imprisonment 1946 to 1966, including his strategy of accepting general responsibility while denying specific knowledge, the 20-year sentence, the Spandau Diaries, and the construction of his postwar persona8Q&A pairs
Section III (Personalities): Leon Trotsky, Revolutionary and Theorist of Permanent Revolution
- Trotsky's role in the 1905 Revolution, including his return to Russia in February 1905, his chairmanship of the St Petersburg Soviet from October to December 1905, his arrest in December 1905, his 1906 trial, and the political lessons embodied in Results and Prospects5Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's assassination in Coyoacan, Mexico, on 21 August 1940, including the 24 May 1940 Siqueiros raid, the NKVD penetration of the Coyoacan household, the Ramon Mercader operation, and the long preparation of Stalin's order7Q&A pairs
- Trotsky as Commissar for Foreign Affairs, November 1917 to March 1918, including the publication of the secret treaties, the negotiations at Brest-Litovsk, the 'no war, no peace' formula, the German offensive of February 1918, and the eventual signature of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty on 3 March 19188Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's background and political development, including his Jewish Ukrainian farming family, his Nikolayev radicalisation, his arrest and Siberian exile, his 1902 escape, the London meeting with Lenin, and the 1903 RSDLP split that placed him outside both factions5Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's life and writings in exile, 1929 to 1940, including the Prinkipo, French, and Norwegian residences, the Mexican refuge, the autobiography My Life (1930), the History of the Russian Revolution (1932), and The Revolution Betrayed (1936)7Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's founding of the Fourth International in September 1938, including the 1933 break with the Comintern after the German catastrophe, the International Left Opposition, the Transitional Programme, the Founding Conference at Perigny, and the rival socialist tradition the new International represented9Q&A pairs
- The historiography and modern interpretations of Leon Trotsky, including the Stalinist anti-myth, Isaac Deutscher's classic trilogy of 1954 to 1963, Pierre Broue's 1988 biography, the post-1991 archival opening, and Robert Service's revisionist 2009 biography3Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's response to the Moscow Trials, 1936 to 1938, including the August 1936 trial of Zinoviev and Kamenev, the January 1937 Pyatakov trial, the March 1938 Bukharin trial, and the John Dewey Commission of Inquiry at Coyoacan in April 19379Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's role in the October Revolution of 1917, including his May 1917 return, his July arrest, his Bolshevik membership from late July, his Petrograd Soviet chairmanship from September, his chairmanship of the Military Revolutionary Committee, and his direction of the 24-25 October seizure of power8Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's theory of Permanent Revolution, including its 1906 formulation in Results and Prospects, its mature 1929 statement in The Permanent Revolution, and its political function as the alternative to Stalin's Socialism in One Country3Q&A pairs
- Trotsky as People's Commissar for War, 1918 to 1925, including the construction of the Red Army on conscription and military specialist foundations, the political commissar system, the armoured train, the defence of Petrograd in 1919, and the Polish War of 19208Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's analysis of Stalinism in The Revolution Betrayed (1936), including the doctrines of the degenerated workers' state, the bureaucracy as a social caste, the Soviet Thermidor, the call for political revolution, and the influence of the analysis on twentieth-century anti-Stalinist Marxism8Q&A pairs
- Trotsky's defeat in the struggle for the succession to Lenin, 1922 to 1929, including the trade union dispute, the Lenin Testament, the troika, the Left Opposition platform, the United Opposition of 1926-1927, the November 1927 expulsion, and the Alma-Ata and Prinkipo exiles7Q&A pairs
Section III (Personalities): Mao Zedong, Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party and the People's Republic of China
- Mao's background and rise to prominence, including his peasant upbringing in Hunan, his exposure to the New Culture and May Fourth Movements, his role as a founding member of the Chinese Communist Party in 1921, and his ascent within the CCP through the late 1920s and early 1930s6Q&A pairs
- The development of the Mao cult of personality, including the formation of Mao Zedong Thought at the Seventh Congress in 1945, the role of Lin Biao and the Little Red Book, the cult's peak in the Cultural Revolution, and the eventual repudiation in the 1981 Resolution4Q&A pairs
- Mao's Cultural Revolution of 1966 to 1976, including the May 16 Notice, the Red Guards, the persecution of Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping, the rise of Lin Biao and the Gang of Four, the Down to the Countryside Movement, and the long political and human consequences9Q&A pairs
- Mao's death on 9 September 1976, the Hua Guofeng interregnum, the rise of Deng Xiaoping and the reform settlement, the 1981 Resolution's verdict that Mao was 70 percent correct and 30 percent in error, the continuing place of Mao in PRC public space, and his contested place in modern Chinese history9Q&A pairs
- Mao's establishment of the People's Republic of China from 1949 to 1953, including the consolidation of CCP power, the Common Program of 1949, land reform, the campaigns against counter-revolutionaries, the Three-Anti and Five-Anti campaigns, the 1950 Sino-Soviet Treaty, and the First Five-Year Plan from 19538Q&A pairs
- Mao's conduct of foreign policy, including the lean to one side and the Sino-Soviet alliance, the Sino-Soviet split of 1960, the Sino-Indian War of 1962, the development of nuclear weapons in 1964, the Zhenbao Island clashes of 1969, and the opening to the United States and Nixon's visit in February 19725Q&A pairs
- Mao's Great Leap Forward of 1958 to 1962, including the People's Communes, the Backyard Furnaces, the Lushan Conference of 1959, the dismissal of Peng Dehuai, and the Great Famine in which an estimated 15 to 45 million people died7Q&A pairs
- The historiography of Mao Zedong, including the early Western journalism of Edgar Snow, the Cold War sinology of Stuart Schram, the New Left sympathetic accounts, the official PRC 70 to 30 verdict of 1981, the post-archive revisionism of Jung Chang and Frank Dikoetter, and the sociological and institutional approaches of Andrew Walder and Roderick MacFarquhar8Q&A pairs
- Mao's Hundred Flowers Campaign of 1956 to 1957, the subsequent Anti-Rightist Campaign of 1957 to 1958 led by Deng Xiaoping, the destruction of the intellectual class, and the consequences for the trajectory of CCP policy9Q&A pairs
- Mao's decision to intervene in the Korean War in October 1950, the conduct of the war by the Chinese People's Volunteer Army under Peng Dehuai, the Panmunjom Armistice of 1953, and the consequences for Sino-Soviet relations and PRC domestic politics12Q&A pairs
- Mao's role in the Long March of 1934 to 1935, including the breakout from the Jiangxi Soviet, the Zunyi Conference of January 1935, the trek to Shaanxi, and the consolidation of Mao's authority within the CCP leadership7Q&A pairs
- The succession crisis of Mao's last decade, including the rise and fall of Lin Biao, the rise of Deng Xiaoping and the moderates, the rise of the Gang of Four, the death of Zhou Enlai and Mao Zedong in 1976, and the arrest of the Gang of Four7Q&A pairs
- Mao's leadership in the Chinese Civil War of 1946 to 1949, including the failure of the Marshall Mission, the decisive campaigns of 1948 to 1949 (Liaoshen, Huaihai, Pingjin), the role of land reform, and the proclamation of the People's Republic of China on 1 October 19496Q&A pairs
- Mao at Yan'an from 1936 to 1948, including the development of the Yan'an Way, the Rectification Campaign of 1942 to 1944, the elaboration of Mao Zedong Thought, and the elevation to Chairman of the Central Committee at the Seventh Congress in 19458Q&A pairs
Section II (National Study): USA 1919-1941
- Society between 1919 and 1941, including African Americans and the Great Migration, the changing role of women, and immigration restriction15Q&A pairs
- The social impact of the Depression, including the Dust Bowl, internal migration, the unemployed, and the documentary record6Q&A pairs
- American foreign policy 1939 to 1941, including the revision of the Neutrality Acts, Lend-Lease, the Atlantic Charter, and undeclared naval war in the Atlantic6Q&A pairs
- The impact of the Great Depression on American society, Hoover's response, and the 1932 election15Q&A pairs
- American foreign policy 1919 to 1939, including the rejection of the League of Nations, the Washington Conference, the Kellogg-Briand Pact, and the Neutrality Acts7Q&A pairs
- Evaluating the New Deal, including the recession of 1937 to 1938, the impact on women and African Americans, and historians' assessments15Q&A pairs
- Roosevelt and the First New Deal, including the Hundred Days, banking reform, relief programs, and the recovery agencies15Q&A pairs
- The path to Pearl Harbor, including American policy in Asia, the oil embargo of July 1941, the Hull-Nomura negotiations, and the Japanese attack of 7 December 19416Q&A pairs
- Prohibition, including the Eighteenth Amendment, the Volstead Act, organised crime, and repeal under the Twenty-first Amendment13Q&A pairs
- Social and cultural developments in the 1920s, including the Jazz Age, mass consumption, the changing role of women, the Harlem Renaissance, immigration restriction, the Ku Klux Klan, and the Scopes trial4Q&A pairs
- Roosevelt's leadership, including his early career, the use of the fireside chats, his cabinet, and the expansion of presidential power9Q&A pairs
- The Second New Deal, including the Wagner Act, the Social Security Act, the WPA, the court-packing plan, and conservative and radical opposition11Q&A pairs
- The American economy in the 1920s, including Republican government policies, tariffs, taxation, the boom in consumer industries, and weaknesses in the economy12Q&A pairs
- The USA in 1919, including the political system, economic conditions, society, and the impact of World War I5Q&A pairs
- The Wall Street Crash of October 1929 and the causes of the Great Depression12Q&A pairs