Answer:
effort justification.
Explanation:
Effort Justification is a phenomenon or an idea in which people believe that achievement of a goal is worthwhile only if they had worked hard to achieve that goal. Effort Justification is stemmed from the psychological theory of cognitive dissonance.
<u>In simple terms, loving to do those tasks which make them suffer only to achieve the goal</u>.
<u>In the given case of group initiation rites, Gregory is asked to perform a series of difficult and embarrassing tasks. After the successful completion of these embarrassing tasks, Gregory was considered extremely loyal towards the group. This is an example of effort justification</u>.
So, the correct answer is effort justification.
Answer:
Federal cooperation helps mitigate the problem of collective action among states.
Explanation:
Cooperative federalism implies that both the federal government and the provincial governments collaborate sustainably, each in their area of competence, sharing their respective powers and resources for the realization of certain purposes.
The regime of distribution of competencies is not discussed; Everyone keeps their own.
Two types of cooperation can be distinguished: Federation-states, in which each, within their respective competences, carries out joint projects. Horizontal cooperation occurs exclusively between states without intervention of the Federation.
“As far as I know both Afrikaans and English are compulsory subjects in every public school. If you go to an English school, you’ll have English as your home language, and Afrikaans as your first additional language, and vice versa. It’s a fact I thought was true for every country in the world up until I went to University, and found out very little people actually speak Afrikaans, if you add the rest of the world to the equation. So yeah, most white people in South Africa speak both languages.
And mostly it’s hard for us to tell which language is someone’s home language, unless you ask that person directly, since most of us speak both languages equally well.
It’s fun if you know a group of people really well, and there’s a mixture of Afrikaans and English home language speakers in the group, since we randomly switch between Afrikaans and English as we’re speaking to try and accommodate everyone.
And usually if I’m telling a story to the group that involved most members of the group, I switch languages so everyone hears their contribution to that story in their own language, and can correct me if I get something wrong. It’s really fun for all of us that way, since even if someone might be struggling with one language or the other for some reason, they can still follow along and contribute to the conversation.
To me it’s also important that we try and speak both languages on campus, since my Afrikaans did suffer when I went home for the first time at the start off last year. I hadn’t been speaking Afrikaans for weeks during that time until I finally went home, and had started to somehow develop a weird kind of accent. I only realized this when I spoke to my parents and ‘their’ speech seemed to be weird yet familiar”.
Answer:
In the context of residence patterns the example of Nina and Declan going to live in her parents house is an example of "Matrilocal Residence".
Explanation:
Matrilocal residence is the type of residence patterns in which the newly married couple moves to the bride's residential establishment and her family. The name comes from "mater" the Latin word for mother and the "local" English word for location. This type of residence pattern is one of the 4 different variations that exist along with their subvariations. The other 3 types are Neolocal in which the newly married couple finds a new home. Patrilocal in which the couple moves with the husband's family and Avunculocal in which the new couple moves to live with the husband's mother brother.