Imperial China and Islamic empires had much in common: both civilizations incorporated a vast geographical terrain and a diversity of peoples that were administered through a complex bureaucratic state apparatus. Continental China’s millennia-long existence and contributions to world culture, and the Muslim expansion out of Arabia into a succession of religio-dynastic realms under which the arts and sciences flourished, created for each civilization a self-confident sense of identity bound up in their respective historical legacies. Such an intense sentiment of achievement makes possible several responses to outside influence, depending upon the circumstances. If there is no perceived threat, a tendency toward resistance and isolationism, whether actively or passively undertaken, can occur as a consequence of disinterest in or disdain for the foreign force
Answer: The plan called for a legislature divided into two bodies the Senate and the House of Representative with proportional representation. That is, each state's representation in Congress would be based on its population.
The goal of the local campaign was to attack the city's segregation system by putting pressure on Birmingham's merchants during the Easter season, the second biggest shopping season of the year. When that campaign stalled, the ACMHR asked SCLC to help.