Answer:
Explanation:
First, it really depends on where you're volunteering and what type of volunteering you're doing.
If you're volunteering with the Peace Corps, for example, and are sent out of the country, language and communication could be a challenge.
If you're volunteering with Habitat for Humanity, younger people could face challenges working with others that are more skilled because they may not be patient in teaching those that are younger.
In some volunteer situations, volunteers, especially younger ones, could be treated more like employees and doing things that an assistant would do, like fetching coffee.
Some volunteer organizations also have age restrictions.
Youth volunteers may also experience burnout if it's not what they expected from the volunteering experience.
Youth may also find their volunteering activity boring. Volunteering is hard work, and can be a shock when they are told they can't be on their phone, or they can't just stand around and talk to their friends.
Volunteering is incredibly rewarding. You have to go in with the mind set that you are there for others, not yourself. Use it as a learning experience and have fun!
Answer:
Eustress.
Explanation:
Eustress is a positive, energizing sense of stress which can often result in improvement.
Internationalists have been fighting for over 4 decades to protect children from becoming soldiers. There have been many court cases and laws enacted to prevent exploitation of children.
Laws have prohibits military recruitment for people under 15, and the International Criminal Court now recognizes breaking this law as a war crime.
OPAC (Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child) focuses on ending children soldiers. This treaty prohibits recruiting anyone under the age of 18, or even asking them to engage in any hostile activities.
Many states have signed OPAC, and other international laws are helping in this effort, such as the International Labour Organization and the African Union's Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child.
Answer:
Because the physicians blamed the Black Death on an evil, polluted fog, logical recommendations to prevent the fever involved avoiding these miasmas, or corruptions of air.
Fires were a popular method of warding off miasmas. They were burned at street corners; even the pope sat between two large fires. People were urged to burn aromatic woods, but other scents would do as well, including rosemary, amber, musk and fragrant flowers. When they walked, people took their scents with them, carrying packets of herbs. Some plague-proofed their homes by putting glazes over the southern windows to block the polluted southern wind. People were advised not to eat meat or figs and to avoid activities that would open the pores to a miasma, including bathing, exercising and physical intimacy. Stranger recommendations circulated as well, including not sleeping during the daytime and avoiding sad thoughts about death and disease.
Explanation:
please mark me as brainliest thank you merry Christmas
1st amendment- freedom of religion, speech, petition and assembly
2nd amendment- rights to bear arms
3rd amendment- no quartering of soldiers
4th amendment- protection against illegal search and seizure
5th amendment- protection against self-incrimination double jeopardy “I plead the fifth” (basically you don’t have to say anything that will make your situation worse)
6th amendment- right to speedy and public trial, impartial jury and rights to counsel
7th amendment- right to a trial by jury in common-law cases
8th amendment- protection against cruel and unusual punishment, no excessive bail imposed
9th amendment- the enumeration of rights in the constitution won’t be used against the people
10th amendment- reserved powers to the state
11th amendment- states are protected from being sued by citizens or another state
12th amendment- separated balloting procedures for president and vice president
(put them as a team)
13th amendment- abolition of slavery
14th amendment- granted former slaves citizenship and equal protection, established principle of selective incorporation
15th amendment- African-American men could vote
16th amendment- establish federal income tax
17th amendment- direct election of US senators
18th amendment- prohibition
19th amendment- Women have the rights to vote
20th amendment- President and vice president‘s term of office begins on January 20th and no longer in March
21st amendment- repeal or prohibition
22nd amendment- presidents limited to two terms
23rd amendment- D.C. give. presidential electors
24th amendment- poll tax is illegal
25th amendment- established VP as successors if he is unable to serve P can nominate VP if there is a VP vacancy
26th amendment- 18-year-olds have the right to vote
27th amendment- congressional pay raises will only take effect after the next election