Genocide Watch in the U.S. and the Green Belt Movement in Kenya are examples of <u>"Nongovernmental Organizations".</u>
The Green Belt Movement (GBM) was established by Professor Wangari Maathai in 1977 under the sponsorship of the National Council of Women of Kenya (NCWK) to react to the necessities of provincial Kenyan ladies who announced that their streams were becoming scarce, their nourishment supply was less secure, and they needed to walk further and further to get kindling for fuel and fencing.
Genocide Watch exists to anticipate, counteract, stop, and rebuff decimation and different types of mass murder. Our motivation is to fabricate a worldwide development to counteract and stop genocide.
Answer:
Group polarization
Explanation:
In psychology, group polarization alludes to members of a group making decisions that are more extreme than their original predisposition. It occurs due to individuals determining their social and personal worth based on comparison to others. In making group decisions, most members take the process on with the thought that their additions are better than those of the other members.
The Constitution is difficult to amend because it requires a supermajority of either members of Congress or a supermajority of state legislatures to propose a new amendment for ratification.
<span>B. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People ~~ this is not the answer, I got it wrong the first time~~</span>
Answer:
see below *ALSO SPELL CHECK PLEASE GRAMMERLY ISNT WORKING FOR SOME REASON*
Explanation:
In the persepctive of the German people, the post-war punishment that would be percieved as the "harshest" or "most upsetting" was most likely punishment 1,4 and 5, and the ones that were probably viewed as the "east harsh" or insignificant to the German people was punishment 8. The reason that I assume that the harshest, most significant, and most upsetting punishment(s) were 1,4, and 5 is because these are the punishments that effected the german people <em>directly. </em>The loss of land probably led to relocation and people losing homes, property, etc. The fact that Germany has to take the blame for the war led to racism and prosecution of the German people, many of which had nothing to do with the war and wanted it to end as much as everyone else. And, lastly, punishment 5 was one of the most upsetting because the debt that Germany went into (-33 billion dollars!) will no doubt have caused inflammation of prices, poverty, and lack of resources due to low government funding, which would have effected the people the most, especially those who depended on government help and were not doing well financially to begin with. The punishment that was probably the least significant to the German people was 8, "force all military leaders, including Kaiser Wilhelm II to face trials for war crimes". This is because the people did not have a direct relation with any of these leaders, so it does not concern them as much as punishments like 1,4 and 5 did.