In the House of Representatives it's by population size. In the senate it's always two
1.) <span>Human georgraphy is the study of how humans have affected and been affected by the environment and why civilizations are where they are. It talks about culture, arithmetic density, migration, population, etc. Physical geography, however, is the study of the physical characteristics of Earth (minus the human aspect), such as mountains, oceans, rivers, etc.
2.) </span> A monarch is the head of a monarchy<span>, a form of government in which a state or polity is ruled by an individual who normally rules for life or until abdication, and typically inherits the throne by birth.
3.) </span><span>All of this started to filter into Europe, with some early translations in the 10th-11th centuries and a big wave in the 13th. Roger Bacon in the 13th century asserted that observation and experience were surer guides to knowledge than the authorities or pure logic relied on by most medieval thinkers. Another Bacon, Francis (not sure if there's a relation), would develop this into full-on empirical method in the 16th century. Meanwhile, medieval Europe had become very adept at borrowing technologies developed elsewhere (like gunpowder or paper) or devising its own (like the magnetic compass) and putting them to practical use. This would lead to things like the telescope which made the discoveries of Galileo possible.</span>
Answer:
consumer goods sound like the best option
Explanation:
reason because they need food so they had to farm they were fighting with America so they needed wepons and Russia had all the factorys for heavy industry
The African-American Sociologist in this question is William Julius Wilson. Hope this helps, have a BLESSED and wonderful day! :-)
-Cutipatutie ☺❀❤
Two principal tactics are used in gerrymandering: "cracking" (i.e. diluting the voting power of the opposing party's supporters across many districts) and "packing" (concentrating the opposing party's voting power in one district to reduce their voting power in other districts).[3] The third tactic, shown in the top-left diagram in the diagrams to the right, is that of homogenization of all districts.
The purpose is to help or hinder a particular demographic, such as a political, ethnic, racial, linguistic, religious, or class group, such as in U.S. federal voting district boundaries that produce a majority of constituents representative of African-American or other racial minorities, known as "majority-minority districts"
The problem is that it causes increased incumbent advantage and campaign costs
, less descriptive representation
, or using prisoners as voter count.