Answer:
Isolates
Isolates are completely detached. They don't care about their leaders, know anything about them or respond to them in any obvious way. Their alienation is, nevertheless, of consequence. By default – by knowing nothing and doing nothing – isolates strengthen leaders who already have the upper hand.
Bystanders
Bystanders observe but do not participate. They make a deliberate decision to stand aside, disengaging from their leaders and the group. This withdrawal is, in effect, a declaration of neutrality that amounts to tacit support for the status quo.
Participants
Participants are in some way engaged. They clearly favor or oppose their leaders and the groups and organizations of which they are a part. In either case, they care enough to invest some of what they have (time, for example) to have an impact.
Activists
Activists feel strongly about their leaders, and they act accordingly. They are eager, energetic and engaged. Because they are heavily invested in people and process, they work hard on behalf of their leaders or to undermine and even unseat them.
Diehards
Diehards are prepared to die for their cause, whether that is an individual, an idea or both. Diehards are deeply devoted to their leaders or, in contrast, ready to remove them from positions of power, authority and influence by any means necessary. Diehards are defined by their dedication, including their willingness to risk life and limb. Being a diehard is all-consuming. It is who you are. It determines what you do.
Explanation:
Answer:
1. Equality of outcome
Explanation:
Equality of outcome is a strategy often used in an attempt to produce fairness where citizens are expected to achieve the same result or produce the same outcome taking all contributing factors such race, gender, or national background as the same for all citizens involved.
Answer:
psychodynamic perspective
Explanation:
The psychodynamic perspective was introduced with the work of one of the most influential psychologist named Sigmund Freud and is described as a phenomenon that emphasizes an individual's "unconscious psychological processes" such as a few specific fears or wishes for which an individual is not completely aware, and contends that a person's childhood experiences are considered as important in determining or shaping his or her adult personality.
In the question above, Sylvia's hand-washing behavior is determined by the psychodynamic perspective.
Well, for one, Haiti really didn't have anything to offer the United States. No territory. Nothing to trade. Nothing really. But also, the idea of Africans rising up against an oppressive white government and overthrowing them made the United States very nervous, especially since we, at the time, had institutionalized slavery and a culture that was very much steeped in racism. Basically, we were afraid that if we supported the revolution in Haiti, it would encourage our own slaves to revolt against Southern slaveholders.