As you know, Germany was an absolute mess after World War I. Citizens were starving, and thousands of Germans had lost their job. Adolf Hitler saw this as an opportunity to manipulate Germans into thinking it was the Jews who had caused all their troubles. People were desperate and hopeless. They need someone to tell them what to do, and how to fix this mess. They needed someone to tell them who to blame for their starvation and their losses. Adolf Hitler, unfortunately, rose up and became that person.
"First, I want you to starve.
Then I want you to lose your job.
Now you're looking for someone to blame?
That's when I step in and start to dictate."
In the State of the Union Address the President of the United States promised to improve the faltering economy, to increase the amount of federal fundingavailable for art programs, and B. promised to lower taxes on public sector workers.
Answer:
Pacifism
Explanation:
As Eric Hobsbawm explained in <em>The Age of Extremes</em>, World War I happened when the European Empires were crumbling and falling into pieces. Liberal theorists opposed to war as a means of Empires to gain power over others. The economic costs clearly disfavored war but there were also the ethical and moral aspects that gained momentum prior to WW I. These aspects materialised again in the 70s (Vietnam war) when more people started to protest against the human costs of war.
Answer:
The scientist if the field of sociology of law
Explanation:
The sociology of law is a branch of sociology that studies the interactions of the institute of law with other social institutions. The sphere of interests of the sociology of law includes the study of the genesis, dynamics, structure of legal norms, as well as their social conditioning and role in society.
The subjects of jurisprudence as a science and sociology of law at some points are closely related to each other, but, nevertheless, they should be clearly separated from each other. In the most general sense, the sociology of law is engaged in the study of law as a social institution, that is, the subject of this science is a combination of various types of interaction of law as an institution with society, the dynamics of the development of legal culture, legislative and law-making processes through the prism of the influence of society on them and their impact on it. The effectiveness of created legislation also remains a relevant subject of empirical research.
Another characteristic feature of the object of study of this science is that it focuses not on a narrow analysis of the rule of law, their historical and social prerequisites, but analyzes the system of law in its dynamics, development, and directly considers the behavior of people and groups of people in a constant legislative process and changes in the legal system.