Answer:
The answer is below
Explanation:
Considering that the PUSH factor is what determines why the blacks leave the south and the PULL factor determines what brought the blacks to their new destinations in the west or north. Hence, matching them together we have
1. Higher-paying jobs: - PULL FACTOR: this attracted the black people to move towards West and North for proverbial greener pasture
2. Family: - PULL FACTOR: the enthusiasm and willingness to join their families or cater for them pull many out of the southern part
3. Segregation: - PUSH FACTOR: the issue of segregation plays a negative impact on the success of blacks in the south, as it affects their opportunities, hence the need to move away from the south to either west or north.
4. Low paying jobs (sharecropping): - PUSH FACTOR: the issue of low paying jobs push them to look for places where there are high paying jobs
5. Jim Crow Laws: - PUSH FACTOR: Jim Crow laws are laws specifically designed in the Southern United States to disenfranchise and limit the opportunity for blacks to succeed, hence, this forces many of them to immigrate for a better environment.
<u>The doctrine of nullification:</u>
The Doctrine of Nullification clarified the idea that a state has the option to dismiss government law. The most popular proclamation of the hypothesis of invalidation during this period, composed by John C. Calhoun, was the South Carolina Exposition and Protest of 1828.
Calhoun attested that the Tariff of 1828, which supported the northern assembling states and hurt the southern rural states, was unlawful. The Doctrine of Nullification states dwelling inside the Union has the one-sided, innate (characteristic, undocumented) right to void any law made by the government that could be considered unlawful.
The protected hypothesis that maintained the privilege of states to invalidate government acts inside their limits.
The French and Indian War was the last of four major colonial wars between the British, the French, and their Native American, allies for control of North America .As French New France and the English colonies expanded toward each other, they were destined to come into conflict.
3) Popular Sovereignty
4) Harriet Beecher Stowe (I don't know if this is the author you are looking for)
5) Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly ( I don't know if this is the book you're looking for)
6) Free-Soil Party (Free Land)
7) Henry Clay
I hope I helped ^.^
<span><span>it left them vulnerable to the American hunger for land</span></span>