Answer:
Foreign
Economic
Education
Explanation:
Public policy can be defined as the way in which the government of a particular country maintains order, protect it citizens and provide for the needs of its citizen. It is the regulation of some sectors in the economy.
Government can use public policy to address issues in the following areas.
1. Foreign sector: This is the sector that deals with the interaction of a country with the rest of the world. Government can make policy especially in trade so as to protect domestic producers.
2. Economic: This is concerned majorly with budget and taxes.
Taxes for example can be used to finance day to day activities of the government. Government can either increase taxes to increase its revenue or reduce taxes to encourage investors in the country.
3. Education sector: The sector deals with provision and acquisition of knowledge of people. Government can make policy in order to enforce compulsory education of certain age of its citizen such as making it compulsory for children below 15 years of age to be in school
<span>It was the Bay of Pigs Fiasco. It was an invasion of Cuban exiles whose goal
is to overthrow the government of Fidel Castro.
It was launched in Guatemala by CIA-trained counter-revolutionary forces
known as Brigade 2506. Though they were
supported by American bombers who bombarded the Cuban airfields and managed to
overwhelm a small militia, they were crushed by a Cuban counter-offensive by
Jose Ramon Fernandez. Later, Castro himself led the attack and the invaders
surrendered and were imprisoned on April 20, 1961.</span>
Answer:
do Have a pic of the options cuz I can't answer them if I don't know what the options are
Nelson Mandela certainly did not wait to see what others would do. He was an ordinary person in many ways, but he did extraordinary things, and the many names he was given reflected aspects of his being and his destiny. His birth name, Roliblahla, given by his father, is an isiXhosa name that means “pulling the branch of a tree”, but colloquially means “troublemaker”, and he grew to become a committed troublemaker in the name of equality and justice. On his first day of school, he was given the Christian name Nelson by his teacher, a common practice influenced by British colonials who couldn’t easily pronounce African names. In later life South Africans of all ages called him “Tata,” a term of endearment meaning “father.” He also is referred to as “Khulu,” the abbreviated form of “grandfather,” also meaning “Great One.” After his death he was affectionately referred to as Madiba, his clan name, that reflected respect for his ancestry.