Answer:
Taxing Colonies, Bringing More slaves and British citizens to the colonies, and sending more British troops and control. hope i helped
Explanation:
I feel as if it was a necessary in the building blocks in american history. Without the constitutional convection who knows how we would be governed.
Explanation:
Assimilation system ensures that all Aborigines and portion are determined to produce the same standard of living as other Australians and reside as members of a particular Australian population, with the same rights and protections, acknowledging the same customs, and being significantly affected by the very same belief systems as other Australians.
The correct answer is C. Brook Farm
Explanation:
The transcendentalism was a movement that emerged in the 19th century the U.S. and focused on the individual and the role of this in society as self- reliant and independent which were ideas influenced by European philosophers such as Immanuel Kant ad Emmanuel Swedenborg. This movement had a great impact on society and because of this different associations and organization based on it were founded and besides this, people tried to integrate those ideas into real communities, one of the most important cases in the U.S. was the Brook Farm that was founded in Massachusetts and was a community and experiment based on some of the principles of transcendentalism.
Therfore, the community that is associated with transcendentalism is the Brook Farm as this was an experiment that applied principles of transcendentalism in real life; also others such as the Oneida Community and the Ephrata Cloister were religious organization and the Fourierims was a philosophy based on Charles Fourier that different from the Transcendentalism and therefore these were not associated with Transcendentalism.
World War 1 because as Taskmasters said on this website, "Dadaism was an art movement of the European avant-garde, in the early 20th century, which was heavily influenced by World War I. It was anti-war and anti-bourgeois, and had political affinities with radical left. Some of the key figures of the Dada movement were: Hugo Ball, Emmy Hennings, Hans Arp, George Grosz, Max Ernst, Beatrice Wood, Tristan Tzara, Francis Picabia, etc. The movement influenced later styles in art such as Surrealism, Nouveau Realisme, pop art and Fluxus." (I quoted another guy's answer a.k.a. Taskmasters.