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aksik [14]
3 years ago
7

No place has seen the paradox of supranationalism and devolution more than europe. Discuss the european paradox" with respect to

the rise of supranationalism occurring simultaneously with devolution/balkanization during the last 50 years."
Social Studies
1 answer:
Gemiola [76]3 years ago
7 0

Ideas for a supranational state arose after the World War II, with the goal of preventing another catastrophe. Supranationalism refers to a large amount of power given to an authority which is in theory placed higher than the state (for example, European Union). Economic partnership helped form this Union of states. At the same time, some people feared that their states would lose their sovereignty, even farther there was a rising tendency towards formation of new independent countries (Catalonia, Baskia, Valonia, South Tirol, etc.). These national movements were economically powerful and saw themself in a position to form a new national identity which will then cooperate with other states elements - countries in this supranational state (the European Union).

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What was the solution to the coercive acts of 1774?
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How did Georgia’s political leaders feel about the Civil
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The civil rights movement in the

American South was one of the most significant and successful social movements in the modern world. Black Georgians formed part of this southern movement for full civil rights and the wider national struggle for racial equality. From Atlanta to the most rural counties in Georgia's southwest Cotton Belt, Black activists protested white supremacy in myriad ways—from legal challenges and mass demonstrations to strikes and self-defense. In many ways, the results were remarkable. As late as World War II (1941-45) Black Georgians were effectively denied the vote, segregated in most areas of daily life, and subject to persistent discrimination and violence. But by 1965, sweeping federal civil rights legislation prohibited segregation and discrimination, and this new phase of race relations was first officially welcomed into Georgia by Governor Jimmy Carter in 1971.

Early Years of Protest

Although the southern civil rights movement first made national headlines in the 1950s and 1960s, the struggle for racial equality in America had begun long before. Indeed, resistance to institutionalized white supremacy dates back to the formal establishment of segregation in the late nineteenth century. Community leaders in Savannah and Atlanta protested the segregation of public transport at the turn of the century, and individual and community acts of resistance to white domination abounded across the state even during the height of lynching and repression. Atlanta washerwomen, for example, joined together to strike for better pay, and Black residents often kept guns to fight off the Ku Klux Klan.

Around the turn of the century

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