Answer: B. Emotion-driven
Explanation: I would think in-order to understand the pain of someone or something else you would have to use a little emotion and empathy. Tell me how you do.
Answer:
Most victims report their victimization to the police
Explanation:
In the first nationwide victimization survey, the National Opinion Research Center survey concluded that: most victims report their victimization to the police
The Nationwide victimization survey collects data and measures the amount of crime committed with a period which involves people from 12 years and above. such data covers crimes that are committed in schools. contacts with law enforcement and even other kinds of crimes
This survey is administered by US census bureau
Three major consumers in a temperate forest area - 1) primary, 2) secondary, and 3) tertiary
1. Primary consumers: squirrel, birds, deer, etc.
2. Secondary consumers: raccoons, snakes, etc.
3. Tertiary consumers: bears, etc.
Answer: 4. Regents of the University of California v. Bakke
Explanation:
In June 1978, the Supreme Court declared that affirmative action was legal insofar as racial quotas were not used. The case was brought by a white California man, Allan Bakke who said he had suffered reverse racism as he had higher scores than minority group members but was refused admission because of a University rule that reserved 16% of admission slots for minority groups. The Supreme Court ordered the University to admit Bakkie as using quotas was unconstitutional but also held that race can be used as a valid factor in admissions decisions.
This showed that affirmative action was legal but subject to scrutiny.
The incest taboo is a universal rule, that is, it is present in all human societies for which there is an ethnographic record. It consists in prohibiting the occurrence of sexual and marital relations between close relatives, as occurs between parents and children and siblings. Its existence would not have resulted from genetic problems, as many imagine, but, above all, from socio-cultural issues, such as the need for social relations guided by reciprocity and alliance between families. If it were a prohibitive rule determined biologically, there would certainly be a taboo of incest among non-human primates, felines, canids, cattle, etc. Therefore, kinship is a relationship constructed socially and culturally, as it happens, just to exemplify, between parents and adopted children.
The recognition and classification of relatives varies from one society to another and there are the most complex rules on incest. An example of this is society the father's brother is called the uncle, the paternal uncle. In certain indigenous societies he is also considered a father and, therefore, his children are brothers (not cousins) of his brother's children. In such cases, the recognition of who is a brother implies knowing with which relatives it is forbidden to have sexual and marital relations. There is, however, the registration of marriage between brothers in ancient Egyptian royalty and among the Incas, among others, but they are exceptions to the rule.