The correct answer to this open question is the following.
What responsibilities, if any, do Americans have to promote representative democracy and constitutional government in other nations?
The United States has no responsibility to promote democracy in other countries because that would be intromission in other nations. In today's world, that is not acceptable. Every country is autonomous and has its own right to establish the best form of government their citizens approve.
What the US can do is to be an example of a democratic government by its actions and legislation. It can show other countries the possibilities that democracy offers. However, every country has its own problems and challenges, including the US. That is why it is important to respect the sovereignty of each country.
What are the answers??????????
Of the same contextual "Birth" it came from the same place or gene inheritance.
Answer:
Social Assumptions
Explanation:
A woman who shows herself at the bar is sometimes perceived differently than a man that does the same thing. The interpretation of what it means as a man and a woman to perform the same behaviour in society is overwhelmingly different. Unfortunately, gender bias and gender roles separate male and female allowances.
So, a woman and a man doing the same thing at a bar is perceived differently.
The perception of a man and woman dressed similarly is viewed differently
These are not examples of exhibitionism but the individuals are dressed the way they want and feel comfortable.
Gender bias exists because this behaviour has been introduced and been allowed to perpetuate in society for generations upon generations.
This is continued because society allows it to continue by perpetuating this "norm".
Since women are held at a different standard than men, a man's sexual promiscuity is not viewed the same as a woman's sexual freedom.
Women are most likely to be stigmatized in these cases, unfortunately and in time this may change.
Answer:
decrease.
Explanation:
As developed by Daryl Bem, the theory of self-perception, proposed that individuals establish perceptions and beliefs by analyzing their own actions and making inference from it. He argued that people often evaluate their own actions in the same way they evaluate someone else's actions. This hypothesis further diminishes the role of internal thinking and feeling in the development of attitudes.