The original 13 colonies are examples of settler colonies. The reason the exemplify settler colonies is that immigrants from Great Britain and Western Europe moved to the Americas as colonists and settled the land which built new communities and led to the growth of new settlements. The colonists traveled to the original colonies and largely stayed building a new life which exemplifies the behavior of a settler colony.
<span>Many democratic nations in Europe developed welfare states during the 20th century. All of the following are elements of a welfare state, except C. government ownership of farmland.
You can use the system of elimination here - it's a great thing in a country to have old-age pensions, unemployment insurance, and government-provided health care. What is not as good is when government owns farmlands - it's better for the people to own it.
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What are you asking ?????
The five correct items are:
convention
caucus
direct primary
petition
announcement
Those are the means by which candidates enter the nomination process for public elections. The two terms that don't fit are "inheritance" and "promotion." An inheritance-based system would be like the old arrangements of monarchs or nobles, where someone took over the throne or provincial government simply because he was the son of the previous king or lord. A promotion-based system would mean that persons advanced to positions of public office not through democratic election processes, but by being promoted internally within the government. For some staff positions in government that does happen, and then those are appointed positions rather than elected positions. But for elected positions in the government, democratic processes are followed. Candidates for office must at least announce their candidacy. They may need a certain number of petition signatures to get their names on the official election ballot. Or they need to get on the ballot through preliminary steps by the larger political parties, such as caucuses, direct primaries, and the conventions of the parties.