The answer to your question is option B which is quantity
Answer:
That statement is false
Explanation:
It's the other way around. Their research shows that when the canadians put in the same situation, their judgement regarding acts of violence actually similar and consistent with the judgement made by the americans.
(this research finding is a little bit surprising because Canadians are more well known to have a more polite and gentle culture)
In general , their judgement regarding acts of violence can be influenced by their primal human instincts.
For example, the research showed that:
- both canadians and Americans overwhelmingly approved that acts of violence are justifiable if being done toward people who are broken into their house.
- Both Canadians and Americans overwhelmingly disapproved of acts of violence toward group of protesters.
After Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat in the Montgomery bus boycott, it led to a citywide boycott against the racial segregation on busses. The March on Washington brought over 200,000 people to the Lincoln memorial fighting for jobs and the freedom of African Americans. Martin Luther King also delivered his "I have a Dream" speech there. The Chicago Freedom Movement was formed to protest segregated housing, educational deficiencies, and employment and health disparities based on racism. This led to the passage of the federal Fair Housing Act in 1968.
Answer: White-collar crime.
Explanation:
White-collar crime applies to a financial nonviolent crime perpetrated by businesses and government representatives. The first definition, by Edwin Sutherland, depicted it as a crime done by someone of high social status in the field of their profession.
Examples of white-collar crimes are wage fraud, bribery, theft, identity theft, and forgery.