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Ray Of Light [21]
2 years ago
5

What is the human right act

Social Studies
2 answers:
likoan [24]2 years ago
5 0

Answer:

The Human Rights Act 1998 sets out the fundamental rights and freedoms that everyone in the UK is entitled to. It incorporates the rights set out in the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) into domestic British law. The Human Rights Act came into force in the UK in October 2000.

Explanation:

stellarik [79]2 years ago
4 0

Answer:

the human right act

Explanation:

The Human Rights Act is a law that protects all of us from having our human rights taken away by the state. It means that public authorities have a legal obligation to uphold our human rights. A public authority is, for example, a hospital, school or the government. And everyone is protected.

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Localization of function; primarily where production of speech occurred (Broca's area) and where language was understood (Wernicke's area)
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Angela Wells recently applied for a job at Spiga, a lounge in Paris. Having worked in several restaurants and lounges in and acr
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Answer:  B) Angela is a single mother with two young children.

Explanation: Most appropriate reason amongst all the options can be Angela being a single mother of two young children. Usually a working mother is not found highly flexible with working hours and schedule.This can provoke the employer to become bias and hire the other candidate.

Other options are not as appropriate as option(B) because even if other candidate speaks french fluently, it can make the employer bias but Angela still persist more experience in French and other restaurants so it cannot be a major reason for not hiring her. Hospitality management is not a major need because Angela has good experience in restaurant field.

Angela learning about the job from friend and lounge caters to pick business clientele is not relevant with the mentioned situation in the question. Thus, the appropriate option is option(B).

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How did nationalism differ from sectionalism?
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Essay on school as a zone of peace​
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Save the Children has developed a project that aims to link the global work done on protecting education from attack to what happens at school level in affected countries. Schools as Zones of Peace is a Save the Children led project that aims to secure boys and girls’ protection at school, and avoid that education is disrupted because of armed conflict. The project builds on the Schools as Zones of Peace-model that was successful in ensuring children’s access to education in Nepal during the civil war, and uses components from this while linking it to the Safe Schools Declaration. In the project, we work with children, school management and local communities, and work to influence local, national and global policies. Locally, the project aims to secure protective learning environments in conflict and post-conflict situations, raise awareness among communities, school management and children, and build local and national level engagement to protect education. This includes using participatory tools and methods to engage children. This is a way to implement the Safe Schools Declaration through a bottom-up approach by engaging local schools and communities. Where the context allows, we work through partners to engage armed non-state actors (ANSAs) among others to not disrupt education. Globally, we aim to link experiences from these countries to the global advocacy and policy work.

This project links child protection and education across the interventions. One of the key aspects of the project is to address the issues one has uncovered (for instance ensuring that documentation is follow-up by providing a response, either through referral or through direct support). It is thus important that education and child protection colleagues work together in designing and implementing this project. As Save the Children works to reach the most marginalised children, it is important that when conducting activities, the organisation pays special attention to the children who are not the most vocal, and ensures that the activities are conducted in an inclusive and gender-sensitive way, promoting the participation of all children. Boys and girls should both be represented when conducting the activities.

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