Your answer is cognitive-behavior therapy. (:
So that (almost) everyone has an opinion and so one branch of the government doesn't get too overpowered.
Answer:
Industry in backward areas can become very helpful to revitalize the economy and improve the standard of living of the population with the provision of jobs, salaries, and other associated economic activities. So in this sense, establishing industry in backward areas would be necessary and very helpful as well.
However, there is the issue of whether industry can survive in a backward area, or if it can be established there in the first place. Backward areas are precisely backward because they lack certain socioeconomic indicators that attract dynamic economies, like the education level of the population, or economies of scale. For this reason, it is likely that many incentives, like tax incentives, would be needed for an industry to establish itself in a backward area in first place.
Answer:
The long- established dictatorial government machine was dismantled, and, at least in theory, Cubans were assured representation in the Cortes (the Spanish parliament) and some elective institutions at home. An emancipation law was enacted in 1880, and six years later slavery finally came to an end. Cuban society then began to evolve gradually toward a more egalitarian pattern of racial relations, which were markedly less tense than in the United States. At the same time, owing to a great influx of Spanish immigrants (about 709,000 arrived between 1868 and 1894), Cuba's population underwent a process of intensive Hispanization, particularly noticeable in the principal cities