The number of Japan’s agriculture workers has fallen some 60 percent over the past quarter of a century to below 2 million in 2016, the lowest on record since the government began keeping records, according to a recent survey.
The data show the government’s effort to increase the number of young farmers has yet to bear fruit while aged agriculture workers continue to leave the profession.
The decline in farmers also comes at a time of heightened concern in the industry over the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade pact, which is expected increase competition, and the government’s plan to abolish its policy of limiting rice production and to phase out related subsidies by 2018.
The survey compiled by Japan’s Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries showed the number of agriculture workers fell to 1.92 million as of Feb. 1, down 8.3 percent from a year earlier. Japan had more than 7 million farmers in the mid-1970s, a figure that fell to 4.82 million in 1990 and to below 3 million in 2008.
The number of farmers dropped in all age brackets, except for those aged 65 to 69, which increased 6.2 percent with retirees entering the field.
Farmers aged 70 or older account for about a half of Japan’s total agriculture workers, yet the number aged 70 to 74 tumbled 12.5 percent to 280,700, while those 75 or older fell 8.8 percent to 604,800.
from this site: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2016/07/30/national/japans-farming-population-falls-below-2-million-for-first-time-survey/#.XHmng4hKiUk
Answer:
If its true or false, its true
Explanation:
Answer:
A. S.1626 - Intellectual Property Bankruptcy Protection Act of 1987
B. This law specifically protects the licensor of a right of intellectual property and how this property must be handled in case of bankruptcy.
C. The header states what is the law purpose and the situations that it must be taken into account "Amends Federal bankruptcy provisions to provide that if the trustee in bankruptcy rejects an executory contract under which the debtor is a licensor of a right to intellectual property, the licensee may elect to:[...]". Finally it provides the definition for the intellectual property that it protects "(1) trade secrets; (2) inventions, processes, designs, or plants protected under applicable patent laws; (3) patent applications; (4) plant varieties; (5) works of authorship protected under applicable copyright laws; or (6) mask works (semiconductor chip components) protected under applicable copyright laws."
D. The text structure shows that it states the law purpose and then provides the specific cases and situations that it protects. The law defines Intellectual property at the end to state clearly what does it protects.
E. All definitions stated in the last paragraph define what does the law protects as intellectual property in case of bankruptcy. When the law defines some goods, it also excludes other ones. If there's something that is not included or doesn't belong to any of the six numerals, it couldn't be protected as intellectual property.
F. DeConcini, D. (1988, October 18). S.1626 - 100th Congress (1987-1988): Intellectual Property Bankruptcy Protection Act of 1987 [Webpage]. Retrieved October 9th 2019, from https://www.congress.gov/bill/100th-congress/senate-bill/1626 It's cited following APA 6th edition.
Explanation:
I think that the answer is a. and c. and d. because that is what my teacher told me....so yeah I hope this helped you
It’s either c or d, I’ll put the actual answer in the comments just give me a sec