Answer:
All reform movemets share a common goal of achieving social change (or reform) in a particular aspect, through public policy actions, or direct democracy.
Explanation:
In this sense, reform movements are opposite to revolutionary movements, because while revolutionary movements seek to break with the legal established rule and enact fast and sweeping changes to the social and political order, reform movements seek to change society, step by step, and within the legal boundaries of the country or state where they belong.
Immediately prior to World War I, the only nation that challenged British naval supremacy was the Imperial German Navy. Since the British had entered amicable treaties with other European (France, Russia) and Asian powers (Japan) only the German Imperial navy remained as an opponent to the British naval supremacy.
That everyone gets the same amount of representatives
Answer:
Throughout American history, democratic rights especially the emancipation and marginalization of various classes, has become a moral as well as political problem.
Several statutory changes (explicitly the Fifteenth, Nineteenth, as well as Twenty-sixth) state the right to vote of U.S. residents cannot be revoked on the basis of race, gender, prior servitude, sex, or age (18 and up); the compact as published did not create those rights.