The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
How did the old powers of Europe seek to restrain the ideas of Republicanism and Bonapartism with the Concert of Europe?
The old powers of Europe sought to restrain the ideas of Republicanism and Bonapartism with the Concert of Europe in that this concert represented a system to solve many political and territorial issues that became major problems with the expansionist's ideas of Napoleon Bonaparte. The conservative and traditionalist nations of the old continent did not accept the idea to lose their control and power and decided to do something to stop revolutionary ideas and movements, The concert of Europe opposed nationalistic ideas.
The Concert of Europe was a meeting of nations to find a balance of power.
We are referring to a time in Europe after the Napoleonic period. The European nations were in favor of keeping the status quo of the region, establishing a balance of power. This allowed some countries to intervene on the issues of another in the case there was a threat of internal rebellion. Historians consider the Concert of Europe in two periods, the first after the Congress of Viena of 1815 until 1848, and the other from 1871 to 1914.
Answer:
Ideological
Explanation:
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is a special interest group. It is classified as an 'ideological interest group'
I’m not sure which four rights you are referring, so I’ll make an educated assumption.
1. Freedom of the press has been expanded with information now being harder to control
2. Basic civil rights have been expanded, such as freedom of movement with the abolition of Southern Jim Crow laws
3. The right to vote has been granted to members of minority groups, and women voting has become more culturally accepted
4. Pay has been made much more equal, equal work leads to equal pay despite the sex or race of the individual
The Manhatten Project was designed as a "think tank" to develop the first atomic weapon. The brightest scientific minds were recruited and vetted to ensure that the U.S. had the bomb before other countries.