I'm pretty sure it's navigation acts
Answer:
They both attacked the Cheyenne village killing mostly women and children.
Explanation:
Col. John Chivington and Gen. George Armstrong Custer attacked the Cheyenne people, killing their women and children in the month of November 29th, 1864 and November 27th, 1868 respectively. These battles occurred four years apart but the battles or massacres were carried out on the same Cheyenne people.
These battles resulted in the lose of lives of mostly women and children and a few warriors and also destroyed the village. Gen. George Custer took some of the warriors as captives using them as human shields from enemy attacks.
Answer:
Case study
Explanation:
A case study is a kind of study used in social sciences in which the researcher observes an individual/group/event in a very in-depth manner. Case studies give a lot of information about the person or group who is being studied and let the researcher make causal inferences (because of the in-depth observation) and the researcher gets a better understanding of the situation.
In this question, the psychologist faces an ethical dilemma of needing to remove a potentially beneficial treatment. However, using a case study, she wouldn't need to do so because she could observe the autistic child in his environment without changing it, because the case study is an observing explanatory study. Therefore, the ethical dilemma would be eliminated and she could draw conclusions from the study.
To prove frauds, we need to show that <span>The innocent party relied on the wrongdoer's representation.
If the accused in fraud case represent true representation despite the negative effect that experienced by the accuser than the court will rule that the accuser just make a really bad business decision rather than being scammed.</span>
Answer:
(A) stereotype threat
Explanation:
Stereotype Threat or Stereotype Vulnerability is a situation where people are or feel at risk of conforming to the stereotypes of their social group. Since its introduction in the academic literature, the threat of stereotype has become one of the most studied subjects in the field of social psychology.