Answer:
Conflict perspective.
Explanation:
This is curled or drafted from Karl Marks works which talks about causes an consequences of the elite or higher beings in the societies against the lower or those in the poorer levels.
Conflict theory talks about tensions and conflicts arising when resources, status, and power are unevenly distributed between groups in society and that these conflicts become the engine for social change. Here, power can be seen as control of material resources and accumulated wealth, control of politics and the institutions that make up society, and one's social status relative to others which are not only by class but by race, gender, sexuality, culture, and religion, among other things.
Answer:
C
Census officials have worked to let people know that they can complete the census by phone and mail, in addition to making new laws to protect privacy.
Explanation:
The actions of the people towards previous census shows their misgivings about it especially with regards to the manhours wasted as well as, the privacy of their information which they supplied to the various offices.<em> </em>
<em>In-order to overcome this challenges, the Census official developed methods of taking those information through e-mail,phone call etc. And, also, they assured the people of the protection of data which they supplied to them</em>.
Depends on their parents, but there is no "wrong religion" though some families, religions, and people could look down on others
Answer:
<em>The concept of "Human Nature" is the believe that there are some naturally existing ways that human naturally think, feel and act</em>. The idea is that some of these attribute are innate to the human species and that it defines humanity and what it means to be human. However, some of the challenges put forward by anti-fundamentalists like the philosopher David L. Hull is<em> the temporal and contingent rarity of this "essential sameness of human being" in biology</em>. Other scientific basis of the inherent human behavior like <em>Instinctual behavior and other complex behavior as observed has also been known to be malleable and not fixed as opposed to the fundamentalist that argue that this inner human nature is the same and fixed</em>.
Yes, I do agree with the challenges.
I agree with this challenges from the fact that the idea of what it means to be human is diverse and different across culture, people and even the individual. <em>Some culture promote and encourage hostility as a way of defending and expanding itself, while others see this act as inhumane</em>, and some people do not see themselves as deviants because of their believe that they are exercising their human nature. some other basis is upbringing. <em>A child isolated from the rest of the world and groomed into a specific nature will retain that nature, which shouldn't be so if the internal human natures exists and is as dominant as fundamentalists of this idea claim.</em>