C. by race
the policy of apartheid separated them by race in south africa
Plessy was a citizen who claimed to be seventh eights Caucasian and only one eighth Black. He was imprisoned and trial in a criminal court after an incident that took place while in New Orleans, in 1896, when he tried to board a car designated for hite people. He was denied a seat in the car for white people and urged to take a seat in the car for black people. As Plessy refused on the basis of his predominantly Caucasian race, the train staff arrested him, and then he was put in the parish jail. He was charged with criminal counts, but Plessy requested his case to be presented to the Supreme Court for he deemed there had been violations of the Thirteen and Fourteenth Amendments (abolition of slavery and equal treatment).
The Supreme Court's opinion stated that the treatment based on "equal but separated" did not conflict with the Thirteenth Amendment, for this amendment only protected citizens from being enslaved or forced to involuntary servitude, and no conflict was found with the Fourteenth Amendment since it enforced equality, but it did not specify under which terms. Therefore, the decision of the Supreme Court supported the doctrine "equal but separate" and segregation as well.
Answer:
In the Soviet Union, the first Five-Year Plan (1928–32), implemented by Joseph Stalin, concentrated on developing heavy industry and collectivizing agriculture, at the cost of a drastic fall in consumer goods. ... The second plan (1933–37) continued the objectives of the first.
Explanation:
In the League these peoples would be stronger together against their enemies. One of the most significant consequences of European
settlement in North America during the seventeenth century was the intensification of hostilities among Indian. Disagreement among Indians and their susceptibility to infectious disease
left them defenseless to exploitation by whites and other Indians.
In the interior of New York, however, a different situation occurred. There the tribes of the Iroquois shaped an alliance so strong that the outnumbered Dutch and, later, English traders were forced to work with Indians in exploiting the lucrative beaver trade. By the early 1600s, some fifty sachems (chiefs) governed the 12,000 members of the Iroquois League or Iroquois Confederacy. The sachems made decisions for all the villages and mediated tribal rivalries and dissension within the Confederacy.
Answer:
Segregation is the practice of requiring separate housing, education and other services for people of color. Segregation was made law several times in 18th and 19th-century America as some believed that black and white people were incapable of coexisting.
Explanation: explanation is in anwser.