Answer:
B) People in the United States have the freedom to worship any religion.
Explanation:
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution state this:
"<u>Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or</u> <u>prohibiting the free exercise thereof</u>; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
Answer: If you're starting with the lowest court then:
U.S. District Court, U.S. Court of Appeals, U.S. Surpreme Court.
Answer:
National level : President
State level : Governor
Local level : Mayor
Explanation:
The leader of the executive branch has the power to enforce the laws that created by the legislative branch.
President has the highest authority in enforcing laws that affected the whole nation (such forming relationships with other countries, Federal tax, etc)
The governor has the highest authority in enforcing the law that affected the state (such as state tax income, legalities of a certain product, etc)
The Mayor has the highest authority in enforcing law that affected the local (such as allocating budgets to build local infrastructures or education curriculum)
Answer: NON-EQUIVALENT GROUP DESIGN.
Explanation: A nonequivalent group design is a quasi‐experiment used to assess the relative effects of treatments that have been assigned to groups of participants non-randomly (adults whose name appeared in the local police report as child abuse victims, and those have never been victims). Because the participants have been assigned to treatments non-randomly by Dr. Rose, differences in the composition of the treatment groups can bias the estimates of the treatment effects. A variety of statistical methods are available for taking account of this selection bias. Each method imposes different assumptions about the nature of the selection effects, but it can be difficult to determine which set of assumptions is most appropriate in a given research setting.
In federal systems, political authority is divided between two autonomous sets of governments, one national and the other subnational, both of which operate directly upon the people. ... The governmental structures and political processes found in these federal systems show great variety.