Answer:
Explanation:
iroquois, any member of the North American Indian tribes speaking a language of the Iroquoian family—notably the Cayuga, Cherokee, Huron, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Seneca, and Tuscarora. The peoples who spoke Iroquoian languages occupied a continuous territory around Lakes Ontario, Huron, and Erie in present-day New York state and Pennsylvania (U.S.) and southern Ontario and Quebec (Canada). That larger group should be differentiated from the Five Nations (later Six Nations) better known as the Iroquois Confederacy (self name Haudenosaunee Confederacy).
1. Often, as more people are added to a single job, the marginal return decreases (Brook's law). This is due to several reasons. With more people, communication and synchronization become increasingly difficult. Also, it takes some time for new employees to become as productive as older ones. Finally, if the work is highly divisible, it might just take them longer because they might get in each other's way. Therefore, the first advice would be to check the personnel and try to remove any employee who is superfluous.
2. Diminishing returns is the decrease on marginal output as one production factor increases and all the other ones stay the same. So another solution would be to try to increase all the other factors that have not been increased yet.
Incomplete question. The complete question reads;
According to the text, what is the "central right of the accused"? Why do you think this right is such a critical linchpin of the American judicial system?
Answer:
<u>anyone charged with a crime is innocent until proven guilty in court</u>
<u>Explanation</u>:
Because of the believe in due process, that is, following the laws of the constitution equally among every citizen, it has made the right to fair hearing possible so that no one can be prosecuted without been proven guilty of the accused crime.
<em>Remember, the term justice means fair treatment, so this central right of the due process allows for Justice; a principle the American Judicial system stands up for.</em>