Answer:
American Federation of Government Employees.
Explanation:
American Federation of Government Employees was founded on August 18, 1932. Everett B. Kelley was the first President of this union. In 2015, it had 301,992 members. The American Federation of Government Employees is an American labor union in which more than 670,000 employees of federal government, about 5,000 employees from District of Columbia, and few hundred private sector employees are the members of this labour union.
Answer:
The answers are:
Repeal laws penalizing integrated schools.
Allow each local school district to decide if it wants to integrate.
Explanation:
The "Sibley Commission" was <u>a general assembly of Committees in charge of gathering the people's opinion in relation to the integration of schools.</u> During this time, there was a massive resistance towards desegregation and in order to end it, the general assembly was made.
The final decision happened after 10 hearings. <em>In the end, a bill was passed which repealed those laws that penalized integrated schools.</em> An example of this penalty was to cut off the school from the funding if it integrates. <em>It also allowed the local school district to decide if it wants to integrate.</em> This prevented violence that came with desegregation.
Thus, this explains the answers.
A- The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is a free trade treaty agreement between the United States, Canada and Mexico and modeled on the existing free trade agreement between Canada and the United States, in turn inspired by the European Union model.
B- The main feature of NAFTA was the progressive elimination of all tariff barriers among the member countries.
C- Some argue that this treaty for regional trade in North America benefited the Mexican economy and helped face the competition posed by Japan and the European Union. However, others argue that Canada and Mexico became "colonies" of the US, and that, as a consequence of NAFTA, poverty increased in Mexico and aggravated unemployment in the US. Making the dollar the only currency in commercial transactions between the NAFTA partners implied serious resistance on the part of Mexican society and even by certain sectors of the government where there was fear of the loss of Mexican national identity.
Historically speaking, <span>bilateral relations between the United States and the various countries of Latin America</span><span> have been multifaceted and complex, at times defined by strong regional cooperation and at others filled with economic and political tension and rivalry. Although relations between the U.S. government and most of Latin America were limited prior to the late 1800s, for most of the past century, the U.S. has unofficially regarded parts of Latin America as within </span>its sphere of influence<span>, and for much of the </span>Cold War<span> (1947-1989), actively vied with the </span>Soviet Union<span> for influence in the Western Hemisphere.</span>
The agreement was called the <span>Holy Alliance</span>