Poor Sanitation;
Poor sanitation is when people who live in a particular setting don't have access to safe water, good sewage system and live in a dirty environment.
Effects of Poor sanitation;
- Poor sanitation and waste management create conditions that may encourage flies and other disease vectors.
- Environmental impacts of poor sanitation and waste management at a local level include pollution of land and watercourses, the visual impact of litter, and bad odours.
- Poor sanitation is linked to transmission of diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea, dysentery, hepatitis A, typhoid and polio and exacerbates stunting.
- Poor sanitation reduces human well-being, social and economic development due to impacts such as anxiety, risk of sexual assault, and lost educational opportunities.
- Diseases related to poor sanitation and water availability causes many sicknesses like cholera, diarrhoea, malaria and typhoid. All these diseases greatly affect the health of students. Students cannot even learn properly because they are sick.
Self-determination theory suggests that people are motivated to grow and change by three innate and universal psychological needs.
Answer:
Our legal system relies primarily on the rule of law
Explanation:
The legal system of most countries around the world today is based on the rule of law: written laws that are to be respected and enforced regardless of who the ruler of the country is. This is totally the opposite of what Confucius deemed to be ideal, since the system that he defended, the rule of the people, has been gradually replaced during the last centuries.
Answer: there are many alternatives to the nuclear family.
Explanation: The most common type of family in the U.S is the nuclear family. The two examples of the Yugoslavia and the Southern Indian clearly depicts that apart from the nuclear family we commonly know, other cultures live in many alternatives type of families.