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Pie
4 years ago
4

The modernization and dependency theories represent two categories of theories to describe:

Social Studies
1 answer:
devlian [24]4 years ago
4 0

Answer:

c. Global stratification

Explanation:

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What type of argument is the Declaration of Independence?
kvv77 [185]

According to its principal author, Thomas Jefferson, the Declaration was intended to be a model of political argument

What is the argument in the Declaration of Independence?

The Declaration of Independence states three basic ideas:

(1) God made all men equal and gave them the rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness;

(2) the main business of government is to protect these rights;

(3) if a government tries to withhold these rights, the people are free to revolt

What was the purpose and argument of the Declaration?

The introductory sentence states the Declaration's main purpose, to explain the colonists' right to revolution. In other words, “to declare the causes which impel them to the separation.” Congress had to prove the legitimacy of its cause. It had just defied the most powerful nation on Earth

Was the Declaration of Independence written as a persuasive argument?

The reason why the Declaration of Independence is so persuasive is that Jefferson uses deductive arguments, which includes examples of Britain's wrong doings, which gives the person reading the document a chance to see exactly why they are breaking from Great Britain.

Learn more about declaration of independence :

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2 years ago
Prejudices in a culture ________. Select one: a. represent the symbolic, material, and creative productions unique to a society
tia_tia [17]

Answer:

The answer for prejudices in culture  <u>are rigidly held attitudes, usually unfavorable, and usually aimed at particular groups of people</u>

Explanation:

Prejudices in culture could be defined as hostile opinion to a particular group of people or class of persons. Prejudice has to do with the inflexible and irrational attitudes and opinions held by members of one group about another.

Being prejudiced usually means having preconceived beliefs about groups of people or cultural practices. Prejudices can either be positive or negative however both forms are usually preconceived and difficult to alter.

5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Select two cases in which the Supreme Court incorporated provisions of the Bill of Rights:
Wittaler [7]

Answer:

Gitlow v. New York (freedom of speech) it was a decision of the United States Supreme Court, stating that the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution was stipulated as a First Amendment Revision protecting freedom of expression and freedom of the press to apply in the US states.

Gideon v. Wainwright (right to a lawyer) this is a case of the United States Supreme Court. In it, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that states are required, under the Sixth Amendment to the US Constitution, to provide a lawyer to defendants in criminal cases that cannot afford their own lawyers.

4 0
3 years ago
There has been a decentralization of the justice system in America. What does that mean?
Firlakuza [10]

Answer:

C. Allow the states and the federal government to work together more easily

3 0
3 years ago
How did the advent of the Cold War affect Texas?
Strike441 [17]

Answer:

When World War II ended in September 1945, the United States and the Soviet Union—former allies in the defeat of Nazi Germany had already begun to see fractures in their once-mutual support of one another. Competing views of post-war Europe and other regions around the world quickly set the former allies down a decades-long period of mutual distrust. As a result, an unofficial but nonetheless all-too-real ‘state of war’ developed between the two emerging superpowers. This would become known as the Cold War.

The United States and the Soviet Union were actively engaged in an escalating and intense political, military, and economic confrontation between 1946 and 1991. Over the course of nearly five decades, Texas and Texans responded to their nation’s call to duty on both the military and home front, and served admirably.

Although the Cold War officially ended almost 25 years ago, to many, the real sense of fear and anxiety that Texans (their parents and grandparents) felt is hard to comprehend or relate to. Like the rest of the nation, Texans worried about family members serving overseas during the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and Operation Desert Storm. On the home front, in small and large Texas towns alike, many feared nuclear annihilation and grappled with the need to build a bomb shelter in the back yard during the Arms Race. These same people participated in both anti-war protests and patriotic demonstrations of support in response to the Cold War's impact on their lives.

Throughout the Cold War, Texas was host to dozens of active duty Department of Defense sites, many of  which whose origins began in World War II. A few are still open today. These Cold War military sites included U.S. Air Force bases and stations at Lubbock, Pyote, San Angelo, El Dorado, Del Rio, Eagle Pass, Laredo, Harlingen, San Antonio, Victoria, Houston, Bryan, Waco, Fort Worth, Wichita Falls, and Sherman; U.S. Army posts at Fort Bliss, Fort Sam Houston, Fort Hood, Fort Wolters, and Texarkana; and U.S. Navy air and fleet stations at Kingsville, Corpus Christi, Beeville, Dallas, Fort Worth, and Ingleside. In addition, smaller facilities in Texas played major roles in the national defense: the U.S. Air Force-manned Atlas Missile bases, the U.S. Army-garrisoned Nike Missile batteries, and a U.S. Navy-operated Space Surveillance Field Station.

These military sites trained young men and women in a post-World War II desegregated military for active duty in the U.S. Army, Air Force, Navy, and Coast Guard. The histories of these sites are documented at 'on base' museums, through the efforts of local county historical museums, public libraries, and at each respective branch’s national archive. However, the personal stories of the men and women who served in the Cold War—told in their own words—when recorded and preserved will enrich our understanding of this important period in our nation's history.

Cold War Historical Markers

United States Air Force veterans of the 4080th Strategic Reconnaissance Wing (SRW) stand next to the historical marker for Operation Brass Knob, dedicated in Del Rio, Val Verde County (2008).

In October 1962, the 4080th SRW and elements of the C.I.A. flew Lockheed U-2 aircraft out of Laughlin Air Force Base on secret surveillance missions to document  the Soviet Union’s nuclear weapons build-up in Cuba during one of the Cold War’s most intense moments, the Cuban Missile Crisis. Afterward, when President John F. Kennedy presented the 4080th with an Outstanding Unit Award, he noted, “The work of this unit has contributed as much to the security of the United States as any unit in our history, and any group of men in our history.”

Several sites, events, and individuals associated with Texas’ role in the Cold War are already commemorated with Official Texas Historical Markers. These topics include: Kelly Air Force Base, Sheppard Air Force Base, Ellington Field, Operation Long Horn, Operation Brass Knob, Flour Bluff Independent School District, General Lucian K. Truscott, Jr., and the USS Uvalde. To read these markers’ inscriptions please visit the THC's Texas Historic Sites ATLAS.

Oral History Project

The state of Texas, by virtue of its distinguished and preeminent role in the Cold War from 1946 to 1991, is home to thousands of Cold War oral histories, both military and civilian, that remain unrecorded or preserved.To aid in the preservation of this history, the Texas Historical Commission's (THC) Military Sites Program recently conducted a two-year oral history series titled When the Lone Star State Met the Iron Curtain: Recollections of Texas in the Cold War.

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8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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