The correct answer is b) American Indian communities of the Iroquois Confederation.
The political structures of the thirteen British colonies in North America can best be compared to the political structures of the American Indian communities of the Iroquois Confederation.
The Iroquois Confederation was conformed by many tribes such as the Ondonaga, the Mohawks, the Oneida, the Cayuga, and the Seneca. However, each tribe had its form of government with a form of the council where native Indians elected their delegates.
The 13 colonies considered themselves different colonies with special characteristics, customs, cultures, and forms of government. They were in the same North American territory but lived under different rules.
That is why we considered them as different groups in terms of culture (the types of people), landscape (the land and location), and reasons for settlement. Those cultural differences and belief systems created their own identities.
Answer:
B)the increased labor needs as a result of the
war
Answer:
probably not
Explanation:
i'm assuming the time period that you're referring to is the 50's, so i'm going to go with no.
this is what i found if this not help im sorry and i qote
"The purpose of this study is to assess the ways in which President Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy reacted to the civil rights crises in Little Rock in 1957 and at Ole Miss in 1962. A side theme is to assess presidential learning by seeing whet Kennedy learned from the lessons taught by Eisenhower. Each president was reluctant to commit federal troops to enforcing civil rights, was concerned about the problems associated with federalism, and ended up feeling forced to commit troops nonetheless. The message is that despite the presidents' best intentions, troops ultimately had to be committed. Kennedy was unable to avoid the traps that Eisenhower had encountered, and the imposition of the national government on the enforcement of civil rights was firmly established.
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