I would go with 50 since according to recent statistics %47 percent of Africans already live in an urban environment. Could the question be outdated?
<u>Answer:
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The two questions sociologists always ask are 'where are you from?' and 'what do you do?'.
<u>Explanation:
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- Most sociologists who come across other unknown people are curious about their background, owing to which, they ask them where they are from. By knowing where the other person is from, sociologists devise his language of preference, his accent, his choices, etc.
- By asking what the other person does, a sociologist determines the income of that person, his social status, etc.
The Shiites believed that Ali of Muhammad’s cousin and son in law should be the leader.
The Sunni’s believed that Abu Bakr, his father in law, to be the leader.
They had to choose a new leader as Muhammad died in 632CE and they were attempting to decide their new ruler, soon leading to a division on who they would choose.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Ethnocentrism can make you sort of blind to new things in other cultures and sometimes make you right them off as strange or unnatural, when in fact it's most likely just that it's something we aren't used to seeing in our own cultures. The United States has a lot of very deep-rooted and socio systematic ethnocentrism that I think affects a lot of Americans so heavily they don't even notice it, but ethnocentrism comes in many forms throughout many groups of people, not just Americans. Ethnocentrism can make you unable to fully take in another culture, and therefore unable to fully understand it and the people it belongs to.
Answer:
Explanation:
It wasn't exactly disagreeable speech. The Supreme Court wrangled about the place of the American Flag in American life.
The core issue was whether or not desecration of the US flag is protected by the First Amendment. The Supreme Court's final decision was yes but only by a 5-4 margin.
So in effect disagreeable speech was upheld. Various attempts have been made to make burning of the flag just going a bit too far. All attempts have failed and the right to disagreeable speech has been upheld.