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Essay On The Rise Of Rome And Globalization

595 Words3 Pages

(541 words spaced)
After reading the infectious diseases issue affected by globalization, although the movement of people, food, and manufactured goods can have such a negative impact on public health, we should not reduce these flows. The other options are the lowering the spread of global diseases.
“international travel by people can lead to the exposure and transmission of infectious diseases, infectious agents can also be "imported" into the United States through the food trade. This issue is growing in importance thanks to a vast increase in the international food trade” (Globalization101, "Health and Globalization", n.d., p. 1). Therefore, the above mentioned international travel increased trade in food and lead to the spread of food-borne …show more content…

According to the Fall of Rome and Han China, Similarities and Differences:
- Internal opposition - barracks emperors
Difficulties in administering vast empire creates rivalries and divisions of authority
Eastern and Western Empire - capital moved to Constantinople

- Which are some common reasons Rome and Han collapsed?
They both got too big and overextended, and they became too expensive to be sustained by the available resources.
They didn't have a fundamental technological breakthrough to fund any resources
- Growth of large landowning families with huge estates enabled them to avoid paying taxes, turned free peasants into impoverished tenant farmers, diminished authority of central government
- Which are some common reasons Rome and Han collapsed? (continued)
Rivalry among elite factions created instability and eroded imperial authority
Epidemic disease ravaged both societies
Growing threat from nomadic or semi-agricultural peoples occupying the frontier regions of both empires
- What did the collapse of the empire mean?
Disappearance of centralized government
Endemic conflict
Decline of urban

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