By virtue of their familiarity in a foreign country or region, IGOs and NGOs are a valuable source of information for a Joint Task Force commander who may have neither access to nor current information about the affected country or region.
Answer: Option B
<u>Explanation:
</u>
NGOs and IGOs are sources of information when certain forces do not tend to have the same. NGOs and IGOs are known for collecting information about the affected country or region. They consist of specialized people who have a better understanding or idea of what kind of data they are going to collect.
Although they tend to collect such data, they hardly disclose the same as it is for their purpose. Moreover, it is difficult to rely on data published by the government due to a lack of accuracy.
Answer:
Generalizable
Explanation:
It is always not possible to select the entire population to conduct a study. So, a sample is chosen from the population which has the same differences of factors in equal proportions. Only then will the research be considered as valid for the whole population.
When the sample represents the population completely then the results of the study can be extended to the population. This is known as generalization.
Hence, the question is referring to generalizable.
Answer: <em>Toast</em>
Explanation:
A toast can be described as a type of a brief speech made in order to congratulate, appreciate and remember an individual or his/her contribution. It is also referred to as a ritual where one may express goodwill or honor to an individual, institution, group or event. The tone through which it is conveyed is mostly humorous or solemn.
Answer:
Imagined communities
Explanation:
The concept of Imagined communities was developed in 1983 by historian Benedict Anderson, the concept of imagined communities refers to the fact that a nation "<em><u>is imagined because the members of even the smallest nation will never know most of their fellow-members, meet them, or even hear of them, yet in the minds of each lives the image of their communion"</u></em>
So, members of most ethnic groups and nations will never know each other face to face and yet, they identify themselves as part of a nation with common characteristics (and this is where <u>nationalism</u> appears).
Therefore, according to this concept, <u>nations are a socially constructed group, imagined by people who perceive themselves as part of the group. </u>
Thus, we can conclude that the question regarding anthropological research refers specifically to Imagined communities.