Answer:
man power, cheap labour, low wages
Answer;
-Reduced trade barriers and streamlined customs procedures has allowed goods to be easily and readily available throughout the trans-Pacific.
Explanation;
-Reduced trade barriers allow producers to enter foreign market without increasing the price of their product, which improve their overall sales. Removing trade barriers helps emerging markets boost economic growth.
-The streamlined customs procedures minimize the cost by focusing on a specific type of products (mainly electronics)
Ingratiation is the most popular general verbal strategy utilized in compliance gaining and/or persuasion.
Answer: Option C
<u>Explanation:</u>
Ingratiation refers the process of influencing a person by developing a good impression in them such that you become likeable. This is a psychological technique used for gaining or for persuasion. This term was created by Edward E Jones- a psychologist.
Research suggests that acts like being modest, providing favours and helping people can help in leading to ingratiation. This is done to increase the trust with the other person such that the person believes the other person and shares the confidential information.
Answer:
The Thirteenth Amendment (1865) ended slavery, and slavery’s end meant newfound freedom for African Americans.
During the period of Reconstruction, some 2000 African Americans held government jobs.
The black family, the black church, and education were central elements in the lives of post-emancipation African Americans.
Many African Americans lived in desperate rural poverty across the South in the decades following the Civil War.
In telling the history of the United States and also of the nations of the Western Hemisphere in general, historians have wrestled with the problem of what to call the hemisphere's first inhabitants. Under the mistaken impression he had reached the “Indies,” explorer Christopher Columbus called the people he met “Indians.” This was an error in identification that has persisted for more than five hundred years, for the inhabitants of North and South America had no collective name by which they called themselves.
Historians, anthropologists, and political activists have offered various names, none fully satisfactory. Anthropologists have used “aborigine,” but the term suggests a primitive level of existence inconsistent with the cultural level of many tribes. Another term, “Amerindian,” which combines Columbus's error with the name of another Italian explorer, Amerigo Vespucci (whose name was the source of “America”), lacks any historical context. Since the 1960s, “Native American” has come into popular favor, though some activists prefer “American Indian.” In the absence of a truly representative term, descriptive references such as “native peoples” or “indigenous peoples,” though vague, avoid European influence. In recent years, some argument has developed over whether to refer to tribes in the singular or plural—Apache or Apaches—with supporters on both sides demanding political correctness.