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NeX [460]
1 year ago
8

What do you think the power of protests and boycotts? can you think of any other examples in history when these tools have helpe

d people create change as successfully? cite evidence from this text, your own experience, and other literature, art,or history in your answer.
Social Studies
1 answer:
swat321 year ago
5 0

<u>You need to stay current with local news</u> in order to respond to questions like this. Boycotts and protests are extremely common occurrences; mainstream media, local media, and even alternative media outlets regularly cover them.

"Touch the grass," as the saying goes, implies to observe outside of your comfort zones. Get off the internet and interact with individuals who are fighting for their human fundamental needs such as adequate housing, wage increases, accessible healthcare, climate justice, cheaper costs for essential necessities like gasoline, and so on.

To provide evidence or examples in history, we can trace the 8-hour workday of today's workers back to earlier labor movements of various unions. Because of these labor movements, we despise child labor. Previously, workers' boycotts and strikes had a significant impact on how we opposed cruel capitalistic ways.

Power of the people to organize themselves to protect each other helped people create change successfully.

There's nothing wrong with knowing about the history of struggles in your own nation and siding with the downtrodden rather than looking aside and empowering the oppressors.

Learn how the Montgomery bus boycott affected the civil rights movement: brainly.com/question/8475876

#SPJ4

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identify three surface process that are part of the rock cycle. Explain the role of each process in the cycle.
Galina-37 [17]

Answer:

PLEASE MARK ME BRAINLIEST!!!!!!!

Explanation:

There are three main types of rocks: sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic. Each of these rocks are formed by physical changes—such as melting, cooling, eroding, compacting, or deforming—that are part of the rock cycle.

Sedimentary Rocks

Sedimentary rocks are formed from pieces of other existing rock or organic material. There are three different types of sedimentary rocks: clastic, organic (biological), and chemical. Clastic sedimentary rocks, like sandstone, form from clasts, or pieces of other rock. Organic sedimentary rocks, like coal, form from hard, biological materials like plants, shells, and bones that are compressed into rock.

The formation of clastic and organic rocks begins with the weathering, or breaking down, of the exposed rock into small fragments. Through the process of erosion, these fragments are removed from their source and transported by wind, water, ice, or biological activity to a new location. Once the sediment settles somewhere, and enough of it collects, the lowest layers become compacted so tightly that they form solid rock.

Chemical sedimentary rocks, like limestone, halite, and flint, form from chemical precipitation. A chemical precipitate is a chemical compound—for instance, calcium carbonate, salt, and silica—that forms when the solution it is dissolved in, usually water, evaporates and leaves the compound behind. This occurs as water travels through Earth’s crust, weathering the rock and dissolving some of its minerals, transporting it elsewhere. These dissolved minerals are precipitated when the water evaporates.

Metamorphic Rocks

Metamorphic rocks are rocks that have been changed from their original form by immense heat or pressure. Metamorphic rocks have two classes: foliated and nonfoliated. When a rock with flat or elongated minerals is put under immense pressure, the minerals line up in layers, creating foliation. Foliation is the aligning of elongated or platy minerals, like hornblende or mica, perpendicular to the direction of pressure that is applied. An example of this transformation can be seen with granite, an igneous rock. Granite contains long and platy minerals that are not initially aligned, but when enough pressure is added, those minerals shift to all point in the same direction while getting squeezed into flat sheets. When granite undergoes this process, like at a tectonic plate boundary, it turns into gneiss (pronounced “nice”).

Nonfoliated rocks are formed the same way, but they do not contain the minerals that tend to line up under pressure and thus do not have the layered appearance of foliated rocks. Sedimentary rocks like bituminous coal, limestone, and sandstone, given enough heat and pressure, can turn into nonfoliated metamorphic rocks like anthracite coal, marble, and quartzite. Nonfoliated rocks can also form by metamorphism, which happens when magma comes in contact with the surrounding rock.

Igneous Rocks

Igneous rocks (derived from the Latin word for fire) are formed when molten hot material cools and solidifies. Igneous rocks can also be made a couple of different ways. When they are formed inside of the earth, they are called intrusive, or plutonic, igneous rocks. If they are formed outside or on top of Earth’s crust, they are called extrusive, or volcanic, igneous rocks.

Granite and diorite are examples of common intrusive rocks. They have a coarse texture with large mineral grains, indicating that they spent thousands or millions of years cooling down inside the earth, a time course that allowed large mineral crystals to grow.

Alternatively, rocks like basalt and obsidian have very small grains and a relatively fine texture. This happens because when magma erupts into lava, it cools more quickly than it would if it stayed inside the earth, giving crystals less time to form. Obsidian cools into volcanic glass so quickly when ejected that the grains are impossible to see with the naked eye.

Extrusive igneous rocks can also have a vesicular, or “holey” texture. This happens when the ejected magma still has gases inside of it so when it cools, the gas bubbles are trapped and end up giving the rock a bubbly texture. An example of this would be pumice.

 

5 0
3 years ago
Professor Kwan studies violence and designs a study of the effects of video game violence on children. She recruits low-income,
Mademuasel [1]

Answer:The reporting of research results

Explanation:

The reporting of the results should represent the actual information that was gathered and shouldn't be made up however researchers may be tempted to make their research sounds more interesting than it would if there were to represent the facts as they are .

These may be done by giving inaccurate statistical values, rejecting negative outcome like Professor Kwan above,not reporting the true numbers, using inaccurate graphs etc.

Professor Kwan received the results that she did not expect to receive hence she makes up the data , rejecting the actual results and ommitting the actual information that she received so now she is not reporting the accurate infromation.

4 0
3 years ago
If there are social workers why is there still discrimination and poverty​
loris [4]

Answer:

Upholding and promoting human dignity and well-being: BASW believes social workers should understand that poverty is a violation of peoples' dignity. It leads to denial of resources required for a decent life. Poverty causes shame and affects peoples' sense of their worth.

3 0
3 years ago
On what do we rely to solve problems in society, according to former President Kim B. Clark.
Delvig [45]

Answer: market

Explanation:

President Kim B. Clark is an economist, he was born on the 20th of March 1949 in Utah, United States of America. He was the dean of Harvard Business school and, the the fifteenth (15th) President of Brigham Young University.

President Kim B. Clark is a Professor with many awards, one of them was award given to him in the year 1994 for the best paper published in Business history.

According to him, Kim B. Clark, he said we rely MARKET to solve problems in society. That is we rely on economy, how things are bought and sold.

4 0
3 years ago
What is provided in the code of ethics for nurses of the american nurses association (ana)?
expeople1 [14]

The ANA Code of Ethics for Nurses serves the following purposes: It is a succinct statement of the ethical obligations and duties of every individual who enters the nursing profession.

<h3>What is ANA Code of Ethics for Nurses?</h3>

The following goals are accomplished by the ANA Code of Ethics for Nurses: It is a concise description of the moral requirements and responsibilities of each person who works as a nurse. It is the uncompromising ethical standard for the industry. It is a manifestation of nursing's concept of its social responsibility.

The nurse has obligations to both themselves and others, including the duty to advance health and safety, uphold morality and competence, and keep growing personally and professionally.

To learn more about ANA Code visit:

brainly.com/question/13161449

#SPJ4

3 0
2 years ago
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