Key Idea: Topic 9.5 is not new content — it is the toolkit for writing about EVERY popular movement you've studied. Four exam concepts (cause and consequence, continuity and change, perspectives, significance) plus the exact shape of the Paper 2 questions that test them.
Think of it like this: units 9.1 to 9.4 gave you the movements — US civil rights, South African anti-apartheid, Indian independence, and more. Topic 9.5 gives you the lens for looking at them, and the exam format for proving you can.
How this topic is tested
Paper 2 always has the same three-question shape, no matter which theme comes up. You never guess the format — only the exact concepts and movements asked about change.
Section A [6 marks]: analyse ONE concept using ONE example — a tight, focused mini-essay. Section B(a) [4 marks]: explain ONE example in depth — specificity beats breadth. Section B(b) [15 marks]: a "To what extent" essay using AT LEAST TWO examples from AT LEAST TWO different IB regions (Africa & the Middle East, the Americas, Asia & Oceania, Europe), with an explicit comparison and a stated judgement.
The exam only ever tests two of the four concepts on a given paper — but since you can't predict which two, you need all four ready for at least two movements from two different regions.
Must-know facts from every sub-topic
| Micro | What it covers | Key names & dates to remember |
|---|---|---|
| 9.5.1 — The four exam concepts | Cause & consequence, continuity & change, perspectives, and significance, each shown through worked examples | US civil rights: Jim Crow laws (long-term cause) + Rosa Parks's arrest, Montgomery 1955 (short-term spark). Indian independence: Indian National Congress organising since 1885 + Britain's post-WWII exhaustion, independence 1947. South Africa: apartheid from 1948, Sharpeville Massacre 1960 (turning point — ANC turns to armed resistance), apartheid ends 1994 with Mandela elected. Petrograd women's strike, 1917 — small event, triggered the February Revolution. |
| 9.5.2 — Paper 2 essay structure | How Section A, B(a), and B(b) are each marked, and how to build a cross-regional comparison for the 15-mark essay | Worked essay compares US civil rights (1954-1968: Civil Rights Act 1964, Voting Rights Act 1965) with South African anti-apartheid (1948-1994: end of apartheid, 1994 elections) — both won legal victories, both left economic inequality unresolved. Also references Indian independence (1947) and the Anti-Franklin Dam campaign, Australia (1982-83, environmental). |
- Cause and consequence — always split causes into long-term build-up and short-term spark; consequences are never inevitable, they depend on choices and contingent events.
- Continuity and change — legal and political change can happen fast (a law, an election); social and economic change moves much slower. Look for a turning point where the pace of change shifts.
- Perspectives — different groups (activists, opponents, governments, later historians) see the same movement differently because of their position and interests — always explain WHY, not just WHAT they thought.
- Significance — judged by impact, scale, duration, and what it reveals about the period, never by how dramatic an event looks on its own.
Modelled exam question — Section B(b), 15 marks
To what extent did popular movements achieve lasting political change?
🔒 Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Important: Using only ONE region in the 15-mark essay. Even a brilliant, detailed answer about a single movement is self-penalising — the question demands at least two examples from at least two different IB regions, compared explicitly, not just described one after another.
What are the four exam concepts for popular movements? Cause and consequence, continuity and change, perspectives, and significance.
What was the short-term spark for the US civil rights movement? Rosa Parks's arrest in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955 for refusing to give up her bus seat — it triggered the year-long Montgomery Bus Boycott.
What turning point pushed the ANC toward armed resistance? The Sharpeville Massacre in 1960, where police killed 69 unarmed protesters against pass laws.
How many marks is Paper 2 Section A, and what does it test? 6 marks — analyse ONE concept using ONE specific, well-chosen example.
What must a Section B(b) essay include that Section B(a) does not? At least two examples from at least two different IB regions, compared explicitly, with a stated judgement — B(a) only needs one example explained in depth.
Why is the Petrograd women's strike (1917) considered significant? Because it helped trigger the February Revolution that toppled the Russian tsar — significance comes from consequence and impact, not the size of the original event.
Prepare at least two movements from two different regions in real depth (dates, names, causes, consequences) so you can answer whichever concepts come up. Always name the concept word explicitly in your answer. For the 15-marker, use linking phrases like "similarly" and "in contrast" at least twice — examiners are listening for the comparison, not just two separate paragraphs.