The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Unfortunately, you forgot to attach the question. Here we just have a statement, but no question.
What is your question? What do you want to know?
If this is a true or false question, then the correct answer is "true."
It is true that Japan's success in modernization has created great interest in why and how it was able to adopt Western political, social, and economic institutions in so short a time.
We are talking about the importance of the Meiji Restoration.
The Meiji Restoration is the period in Japanese history when the political revolution in 1868 ended the feudal system in Japan to restore the imperial system of government.
The Emperor of Japan became the most important figure of the nation after the end of the Tokunaga. The reformation abolished the imperant class system, ended the Samurais as the official army of the empire, establishing a more modern concept of the military with the influence of the western world, modernize the industry of the country, and established basic education for Japanese children.
<h2>The End of Apartheid</h2>
Apartheid, the Afrikaans name given by the white-ruled South Africa's Nationalist Party in 1948 to the country's harsh, institutionalized system of racial segregation, came to an end in the early 1990s in a series of steps that led to the formation of a democratic government in 1994. Years of violent internal protest, weakening white commitment, international economic and cultural sanctions, economic struggles, and the end of the Cold War brought down white minority rule in Pretoria. U.S. policy toward the regime underwent a gradual but complete transformation that played an important conflicting role in Apartheid's initial survival and eventual downfall.
Although many of the segregationist policies dated back to the early decades of the twentieth century, it was the election of the Nationalist Party in 1948 that marked the beginning of legalized racism's harshest features called Apartheid. The Cold War then was in its early stages. U.S. President Harry Truman's foremost foreign policy goal was to limit Soviet expansion. Despite supporting a domestic civil rights agenda to further the rights of black people in the United States, the Truman Administration chose not to protest the anti-communist South African government's system of Apartheid in an effort to maintain an ally against the Soviet Union in southern Africa. This set the stage for successive administrations to quietly support the Apartheid regime as a stalwart ally against the spread of communism.
They study nature by looking at the stars