It b I think but I could be wrong
In the 1950s the world was focused on other things. It was a post-war period in which two superpowers like the USA and the Soviet Union were disputing the supremacy of the world in what was called the cold war. In 1950 the Korean war started. The problem of Civil Rights was latent but international conflicts and the cold war distracted somehow the agenda of leaders and people.
<u>Answer:
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The Family and Medical Leave Act says that the replaced workers must be given a similar position in the same company with the same pay as their old jobs.
Option: (A)
<u>Explanation:
</u>
- The Family and Medical Act of 1993 guarantees job security for the employees who seek long-term leave owing to medical conditions like pregnancy, accidental injuries or other health disorders.
- For the protection of this act to be applicable, the employee has to serve in the same organization for at least 12 months and complete a minimum of 1250 hours of working.
Answer:
B) ethical fundamentalism
Explanation:
A government or political party that strictly derives its ethics and laws based on a specific religious book is an example of <u>ethical fundamentalism</u>. Ethical fundamentalism asserts that the ultimate moral guide is a supreme rule gotten from external sources or central figures such as the Bible and Quran. It involves relying on external sources or central figure for ethical rules.
Answer:
Dame Doris Sands Johnson DBE (19 June 1921 – 21 June 1983) was a Bahamian teacher, suffragette, and politician. She was the first Bahamian woman to contest an election in the Bahamas, the first female Senate appointee, and the first woman granted a leadership role in the Senate. Once in the legislature, she was the first woman to be made a government minister and then was elected as the first woman President of the Senate. She was the first woman to serve as Acting Governor General of the Bahamas, and was honored as Dame Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II.
Born on New Providence Island, she completed her secondary education and became a teacher. After teaching for 17 years, Johnson returned to school to earn a master's and doctorate degree in educational administration. During this period, she traveled back and forth between school and her Bahamian home organizing labor and suffrage efforts. Upon graduation, Johnson was unable to find work because of her activism. She made a compelling speech to the Bahamian legislature in 1959, pleading for women's suffrage and subsequently made a similar plea to the Colonial Office in London. Once the right to vote had been secured, Johnson immediately entered politics in 1961, running in the first election in which women were allowed to participate. Though she lost her bid, she worked with the Progressive Liberal Party to gain Bahamian independence. When the country gained its freedom from colonial rule, Johnson was appointed to the Senate and served the government until her death, a decade later.