Answer:
<em>D) Tribunes </em>
Explanation:
Tribunes is a person who upholds or defends the rights of the people. Roman History, any of various administrative officers, especially one of 10 officers elected to protect the interests and rights of the plebeians from the patricians.
<em> </em>
<em>Any of various military and civil officials in ancient Rome.</em>
“A man just J walked in front of me, broke the law. Did not get a ticket or fine.” Thats is not a civic/ civil issue.
Answer:
c. lawfulness refers to citizens while legitimacy refers to the justice system.
Explanation:
Lawfulness describes an action that is permitted by law. When we say that a person acts in a lawful way, what we mean is that the person behaves according to the law. This word is used to refer to private citizens, and not to government institutions. On the other hand, when we talk about legitimacy, we refer to the institutions of a government. An institution that is legitimate is one that obtains its power to act in a legal and accepted way. Although this also means that the institution (such as the justice system) behaves according to the law, it is not considered the same as lawfulness.
Andrew Jackson (1767-1845), seventh president of the United States, symbolized the democratic advances of his time. His actions strengthened the power of the presidential office in American government. The second crowd that showed up at the mansion was made up of Jackson supporters who were dressed in their best clothes.
Since the mid 20th century there has been a series of treaties and multilateral agreements between European countries which have led to the European Union as we know it today.
It all started as a commercial agreement to remove trade barriers for specific goods, and in 1951 the European Coal and Steel Community was created. The next step was the constitution of the European Economic Comunity (EEC) for free trade and the EURATOM Treaty to reach an agreement about nuclear energy. So far, the agreements only work towards economic integration.
But in was in 1992, in the Maastricht Treaty or Treaty of the European Union where the monetary union was designed, and also the fundamentals of the political integration of this club of countries, such as the citizenship and the common foreign and internal affairs policy. The Parliament started to have decision power.
In 1997, the treaty of Amsterdam reformed the institutions for the arrival of new countries, and the same did the Treaty of Nice whose purpouse was to enable proper functioning with 25 member states.
The last agreement was the Treaty of Lisbon in 2009, with the objective of making the Union more democratic, giving more power to the supranational institutions and deciding which issues were left to each countries goverment and which others should be decided by the UE institutions. Nowadays the UE is formed by 28 states.