Answer:
1. Create laws and enforce existing laws that protect women from discrimination and violence, including r#pe, beatings, verbal abuse, mutilation, t0rture, “honor” killing$ and trafficking.
2. Educate community members on their responsibilities under international and national human rights laws.
The answer to your question is Enlightenment
They had been hunting mammoths. They had followed them from Asia to North America.
<em>The reason for Sherman's Walk to the Ocean was to scare Georgia's non military personnel populace into forsaking the Confederate reason. Sherman's officers didn't annihilate any of the towns in their way, however, they took food and animals and consumed the houses and outbuildings of individuals who attempted to retaliate.</em>
Hope this helped have a great day!
<em>~ChokieWokie~</em>
Answer:
Background: The idea that everyone should strive to be a ‘productive citizen’ is a dominant societal discourse. However, critiques highlight that common definitions of productive citizenship focus on forms of participation and contribution that many people experiencing disability find difficult or impossible to realize, resulting in marginalization. Since rehabilitation services strive for enablement, social participation, and inclusiveness, it is important to question whether these things are achieved within the realities of practice. Our aim was to do this by examining specific examples of how ‘productive citizenship’ appears in rehabilitation services.
Methods: This article draws examples from three research studies in two countries to highlight instances in which narrow understandings of productive citizenship employed in rehabilitation services can have unintended marginalizing effects. Each example is presented as a vignette.
Discussion: The vignettes help us reflect on marginalization at the level of individual, community and society that arises from narrow interpretations of ‘productive citizenship’ in rehabilitation services. They also provide clues as to how productive citizenship could be envisaged differently. We argue that rehabilitation services, because of their influence at critical junctures in peoples’ lives, could be an effective site of social change regarding how productive citizenship is understood in wider society.
Implications for rehabilitation
‘Productive citizenship’, or the interpretation of which activities count as contributions to society, has a very restrictive definition within rehabilitation services.
This restrictive definition is reflected in both policy and practices, and influences what counts as ‘legitimate’ rehabilitation and support, marginalizing options for a ‘good life’ that fall outside of it.
Rehabilitation can be a site for social change; one way forward involves advocating for broader understandings of what counts as ‘productive citizenship’.
Explanation:
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