Answer: the Humanistic Existential Approach
Explanation: The Humanistic Existential Approach to psychology focuses on the freedom and responsibility we have as humans. When used as a therapeutic method, it aims to understand the client’s unique experiences rather than group them into a bracket defined by pathology. It makes the client aware of the options available to them and aims to develop the self.
The Humanistic Existential Approach is based on the humanistic approach which believes in viewing the human nature in a positive light and it therefore also emphasizes positive and healthy relationships.
Answer:
B. The National Response Framework explains how, at all levels, the nation effectively manages all-hazards response.
Explanation:
The national response framework mentioned that in most cases, hazard responses managed by the locals tend to be the most effective.
Emergency situations tend to require a fast and proper response in order to minimize the damage. If a local community only rely on National-coordinated response, there is a chance the help can come too late since it took time for national response to send the necessary personnel and resources to the emergency location.
<span>In a representative form of democracy, it is found that a great deal of authority and influence lies in the hands of regional and local governments. Due to the need to ensure all regions are abiding by certain laws, local governments are granted a greater amount of influence and authority.</span>
Learned Helplessness - a condition in which a person
suffers from a sense of powerlessness, arising from a traumatic event or
persistent failure to succeed. It is thought to be one of the
underlying causes of depression.
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The Hamburg Massacre (or Red Shirt Massacre or Hamburg riot) was a key event in the African American town of Hamburg, South Carolina in July 1876, leading up to the last election season of the Reconstruction Era. It was the first of a series of civil disturbances planned and carried out by white Democrats in the majority-black Republican Edgefield District, with the goal of suppressing black voting, disrupting Republican meetings, and suppressing black Americans civil rights, through actual and threatened violence.[1]
Beginning with a dispute over free passage on a public road, the massacre was rooted in racial hatred and political motives. A court hearing attracted armed white "rifle clubs," colloquially called the "Red Shirts". Desiring to regain control of state governments and eradicate the civil rights of black Americans, over 100 white men attacked about 30 black servicemen of the National Guard at the armory, killing two as they tried to leave that night. Later that night, the Red Shirts tortured and murdered four of the militia while holding them as prisoners, and wounded several others. In total, the events in Hamburg resulted in the death of one white man and six black men with several more blacks being wounded. Although 94 white men were indicted for murder by a coroner's jury, none were prosecuted.
The events were a catalyst in the overarching violence in the volatile 1876 election campaign. There were other episodes of violence in the months before the election, including an estimated 100 blacks killed during several days in Ellenton, South Carolina, also in Aiken County. The Southern Democrats succeeded in "redeeming" the state government and electing Wade Hampton III as governor. During the remainder of the century, they passed laws to establish single-party white rule, impose legal segregation and "Jim Crow," and disenfranchise blacks with a new state constitution adopted in 1895. This exclusion of blacks from the political system was effectively maintained into the late 1960s.