Two reasons can be as follow:
1) Desire to protect folk culture. People have an innate desire to protect and carry on their folk culture and adoption of new culture may interfere with that vision.
2) Fear of change or outside influences. People might have a fear that the outside culture will influence them in many undesirable ways which can prevent the adoption.
Answer:
Detente
Explanation:
Detente: Détente is a French term, meaning a relaxing or easing; the term has been used in international politics since the early 1970s. Generally, it may be applied to any international situation where previously hostile nations not involved in an open war de-escalate tensions through diplomacy and confidence-building measures. However, it is primarily used in reference to the general reduction in the tension between the Soviet Union and the United States and a thawing of the Cold War, occurring from the late 1960s until the start of the 1980s.
I believe the correct answer is false.
Dissociative disorders (DD) are conditions that are
characterized by the breakdowns of memory and disruption conscious awareness,
sense of identity, or perception. Therefore, the symptoms
of DD are memory loss (amnesia) of certain time periods, events, people and
personal information, loss of sense of being detached from yourself and your
emotions and loss of perception of the people and things around you as
distorted and unreal.
Answer:
The answer is Option B: He led a revolution against the British who controlled his country.
Explanation:
Jomo Kenyatta is important to the movement for independence in Kenya and in anti-colonial resistance in Africa more widely. He was Prime Minister of Kenya from 1963 to 1964 and then the country's first President from 1964 to 1978. He became the leader of an advocacy group called Kikuyu Central Association (KCA), and published a Kikuyu-language newspaper called Mwigithania that pushed for reforms and he was outspoken in his critique of the colonial policies of the British government. He spent a number of years studying abroad in the UK and the Soviet Union, and then he returned to Kenya and became leader of the Kenya Africa Union. He was arrested and imprisoned for 7 years on allegations he helped to lead the Mau Mau rebellion of 1952 but he always denied involvement.