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Lostsunrise [7]
2 years ago
5

Why do you think the Bill of Rights contains the right to a trial by jury? What is important about the right to have a jury deci

de someone’s guilty or innocent
Social Studies
1 answer:
KonstantinChe [14]2 years ago
4 0
The bill of rights contains the right to trial by jury because the judges are appointed in many classes of state.Also it is important to have a jury to decide if someone is guilty or not because they are in charge of determining what the facts are,and they listen to testimony and determine that which perspective is guilty or not
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When there is high conformity and low deviance in a group, the group's performance is likely to be:?
bogdanovich [222]
The group's performance is likely to be low because the group fails to change dysfunctional norms, when there is high conformity and low deviance in a group.
High-status deviance has such actions as making fewer contributions to task performance or exercising less influence in the group's discussion.
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2 years ago
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Expansionary spending takes place when government makes decisions to
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raise spending to stimulate the economy


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Hiii I'm good! Also there is not picture! lol

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Two members of the colonial army in 1775 ?
Solnce55 [7]
Two people are George Washington and Benedict Arnold. 
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3 years ago
What is one social issue you think Americans should be conscious about <br>​
Artyom0805 [142]

Answer: What is social conscience, and why is it relevant?

Conscience can be described as internalised values: a person’s intuitive ‘moral compass.’

While rational, philosophical, or religious arguments are often used as justifications,

conscience itself is primarily emotional: we associate feelings of pleasure and pride with right

action, and feelings of guilt and shame with wrong action. These emotions help to motivate

choices and behaviour, playing an important role in the maintenance and transformation of

social norms. In many ways, the norms of society are the sum of our collective values and

priorities – as society shapes us, we shape society.

In addition to a sense of right and wrong for personal action, individuals possess a sense of

right and wrong for collective action – what might be called social conscience. Individual

conscience compels us to act morally in our daily lives, avoiding or helping to relieve the

immediate suffering of others, whereas social conscience compels us to insist on moral action

from the wider institutions of society and to seek the transformation of social structures that

cause suffering. While individual conscience is reflected in norms of personal interaction,

social conscience is reflected in the ways we organise ourselves more broadly.

Across the political spectrum, most people experience a gap between the kind of world they

see and the kind they want. On a personal level, social conscience is what bridges that gap. If

we can understand our own social conscience, we can make more conscious choices to help

shape society according to our values. If we can understand the social conscience of others,

we can find common values and goals among seemingly diverse groups and build movements

for change. Understanding social conscience, whether our own or others’, helps to identify

assumptions, values, and visions, making it an important element of sustainability literacy,

and a useful tool for effective social and ecological transformation.

To give an example, homelessness is an issue of both social and environmental sustainability

- while homeless people contribute least to pollution and environmental destruction, they are

the first to suffer from them. Homelessness may or may not be on the moral ‘radar’ of

someone who is not experiencing it first-hand; it may be considered a normal part of city life

– a non-issue, morally speaking. If considered an issue, a person becoming homeless might be

seen as the result of unlucky coincidence, personal failure, punishment for sins, or particular

social forces. These four examples are not mutually exclusive, but each fits into a particular

kind of worldview dominated by random chance, individual choice, divine will, or complex

social systems, respectively, and would elicit a particular kind of response – charity, tough

love, evangelism, or social change. Each person’s worldview influences the way they treat

new information or experiences, but information itself only sometimes has an impact on

worldview. Raising consciousness of an issue, while important, is only one element of

motivating action to transform it.

5 0
3 years ago
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