Yanuban: Difference between revisions

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As the Burgundian intervention dragged on the rural populations feared losing their identity to foreign influence and a thriving nativist cultural movement came into being. Nomadic Games were hosted to oppose the westernized Olympics, increasingly extreme interpretations of Islam were adopted, and raising children became as much about maintaining tradition as it did about preparing them for adulthood.
As the Burgundian intervention dragged on the rural populations feared losing their identity to foreign influence and a thriving nativist cultural movement came into being. Nomadic Games were hosted to oppose the westernized Olympics, increasingly extreme interpretations of Islam were adopted, and raising children became as much about maintaining tradition as it did about preparing them for adulthood.


==== Globalization ====
==== Zege regime ====
Main article: [[Zege]]
 
Following the conclusion of Operation Kipling and the advent of mass Containerization by the Burgundian} war effort, Audonia became a center of outsourcing. Far more developed than Punth with much of its own infrastructure and a mature raw mineral extraction industry, Yanuban and the other Audonian nations were spared the spate of recolonization that has become common in the late 20th and early 21st century in Punth. The seaports, airports, roads, and railroads that dot and cross Audonia in general, and Yanuban in particular, were rebuilt by Burgundian companies in the 1980s and 90s. As part of the various peace treaties O’Shea Heavy Industries and Lansing Lines were contracted by the Burgundian government to update and rebuild a vast network of communication and transportation infrastructure that, in Yanuban, were spearheaded by local engineers and workers. The experience was vital to a resurgence in the local economy as they switched from agricultural to heavy manufacturing. By the early 2000s they had become a massive exporter in the microprocessor business as well as in cellphone manufacturing. The GDPPC of the nation climbed from $493 to $1,502 between 1998 and 2031 and bore witness to a small but vocal middle class.
Following the conclusion of Operation Kipling and the advent of mass Containerization by the Burgundian} war effort, Audonia became a center of outsourcing. Far more developed than Punth with much of its own infrastructure and a mature raw mineral extraction industry, Yanuban and the other Audonian nations were spared the spate of recolonization that has become common in the late 20th and early 21st century in Punth. The seaports, airports, roads, and railroads that dot and cross Audonia in general, and Yanuban in particular, were rebuilt by Burgundian companies in the 1980s and 90s. As part of the various peace treaties O’Shea Heavy Industries and Lansing Lines were contracted by the Burgundian government to update and rebuild a vast network of communication and transportation infrastructure that, in Yanuban, were spearheaded by local engineers and workers. The experience was vital to a resurgence in the local economy as they switched from agricultural to heavy manufacturing. By the early 2000s they had become a massive exporter in the microprocessor business as well as in cellphone manufacturing. The GDPPC of the nation climbed from $493 to $1,502 between 1998 and 2031 and bore witness to a small but vocal middle class.


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