Answer:
causing the families to lose their homes, and their dignity.
Explanation:
Answer:
The location near the Gulf of Mexico allowed for trade with other civilizations.
Explanation:
The Olmec civilization thrived along Mexico's gulf coast from approximately 1200-400 B.C. and is considered the parent culture of many of the important Mesoamerican cultures that came after, including the Aztec and Maya. From their great cities, San Lorenzo and La Venta, Olmec traders spread their culture far and wide and eventually built a large network through Mesoamerica. Although many aspects of Olmec culture have been lost to time, what little is known about them is very important because their influence was so great.
Probably better defense systems or training people in the army.
Answer:
- Grassroots politics.
- Realization of the need for representation.
- Experience.
Explanation:
Under the tutelage and leadership of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the Muslim League set about increasing its membership and getting its message across. They started many more branches and invited more influential people such as the chief minister of Punjab to join them. This increased their party's reach and support.
More Muslims realized the need for representation especially after riots and religious restrictions showed the Muslims that the Indian National Congress was very much a Hindu party.
After the 1937 elections, the League did some introspection and tried to fix areas they felt they were lacking after seeing how they performed. They therefore gained experience from the 1937 elections that they used to build themselves into a more efficient party.
Answer:
Economic diplomacy
Explanation:
Economic diplomacy is a central aspect of Chinese foreign policy. During China's remarkable economic rise, it has used economic diplomacy primarily through trade, and the use of carrots as a means to accumulate or attract soft power. This was a part of the broader strategy formulated by think tanks in the PRC during the 1990s titled the new security concept. It is referred to in the West as the period of "China's Peaceful Rise".[6]
Recently, China has changed its strategic doctrine and begun to use economic diplomacy as a coercive tool. After 10 years or so of a policy based primarily on economic carrots, China has begun to show a willingness to use economic diplomacy for coercive means.[7] This is evidenced in the September 2010 incident that blocked shipments of rare earth minerals to Japan. Another incident took place in 2012 in the Philippines, where China sent a gunboat in to enforce trade restricts. China's willingness to use bring in warships during trade disputes is reminiscent to an earlier era of American gunboat diplomacy.[8]
Recent history shows that as China grows more confident, we will see it gradually move away from an economic diplomacy policy of carrots, to sticks.