Answer: d. directive called “do no harm.”
Explanation:
DO NO HARM
Under this directive, anthropologists have a primary ethical obligation to think about the possible ways their research might cause harm to the community being researched and to act against it.
Anthropologists should avoid causing direct and immediate harm and also weigh the potential benefits of their work against this.
This is why the practice of sharing ethnographic information on particular communities with nonanthropological institutions such as the military has been questioned under this directive as it could lead to harm to the community.
Answer:
Both give information about the moon landing of the Apollo 11 space mission.
A
Explanation:
Answer:
im pretty sure that its market econymy
Explanation:
because when its a market it means that A market economy is an economic system in which the decisions regarding investment, production and distribution are guided by the price signals created by the forces of supply and demand.
(Image is included below)
Answer:
It shows the dependence on whites that Tecumseh criticized.
Explanation:
Tecumseh was the leader of the Native American confederacy. The purpose of the confederacy was to persuade Native Americans to made any form of relationships with United States government. He believed that United States government will only exploited the native and took away their lands.
The image above represent one of the biggest criticism that Tecumseh had over the government. The settlers always treated the natives like second-class citizens. but their whole economy and livelihood were depended on the Native's hard labor.
The third answer (top to bottom): welfare spending, federal government intervention, organized labor.
Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal found one of its opponents, the Governor Eugene Talmadge. He was governor of Georgia (1932) and was popular with the rural people. He opposed programs calling for greater government spending and economic regulation. His anti-corporate, pro-evangelical and white-supremacist tirades had great appeal.
In Talmadge government, Georgia state subverted some of the early New Deal programs (federal relief programs for example). He wanted the workers to have an incentive to return to private employers. He allied with conservative business interests by <u>opposing government regulation, welfare spending, and the interests of organized labor</u>.