These steps in order are as followed:
1. Hunter-gathering tribes
2. Small towns and nomadic groups
3. City-states and small kingdoms
4. Empires
5. Nation-states
Explanation:
The counterculture movement, from the early 1960s through the 1970s, categorized a group of people known as "hippies" who opposed the war in Vietnam, commercialism and overall establishment of societal norms. Those included in this movement sought a happier and more peaceful life and often did so by experimenting with marijuana and LSD.
The music choice of the counterculture movement stemmed from the anti-establishment aspects of psychedelic rock. During the counterculture movement, attendance at psychedilic rock shows exploded in numbers. Psychedelic rock shows began to become more elaborate as the number of atendees increased. Hippie fashion was often present at these shows.
One of the most memorable music festivals during this time was the Woodstock Music and Art Festival. This highly disorganized three-day-long concert was the epitome of counterculture--from the clothes attendees wore to the anti-war messages performed by the singers.
Much of hippie fashion came from their opposition to commercialism. Most of the clothing that hippies wore was not purchased from major stores, but instead from yard sales or flea markets. Their fashion choices distinguished them from the rest of society because they wore bright colors and things that others would not wear. Their fashion was often a statement of who they were and what they believed.
The counterculture movement largely was in support of the antiwar movement. They organized protests while brandishing signs promoting peace, love, and drugs. Burning draft cards were also a symbol of the movement and became iconic of the anti-war movement.
Answer:
The desire for access to natural and mineral resources and the hope of many settlers for economic opportunities or religious refuge led to an increased migration to and settlement in the West
Explanation:
Answer:
Brown V. Board of Education
Explanation:
The decision of the Supreme Court in Brown V. Board of Education eradicated the "Separate, but equal" rule on the racial segregation of Blacks to attend public schools in America and upheld that they have equal rights regardless of colour or race to be admitted into public schools that are white-dominated. The Supreme Court in giving its decision stated that the "Separate, but equal" principle is unconstitutional as it offends the Fourteenth Amendment I.e "the equal protection clause". That separate but equal inherently means no equality. The decision of the court, in this case, overruled the decision in Plessy v. Ferguson.