World War I caused the involvement of a great many American women in the nation's workforce. This advanced the cause of the cause of the women's suffrage movement. Women were granted voting rights in the United States in 1920. The participation of women in helping the war effort was a significant cause that led to the passage of the 19th Amendment.
Further details:
During World War I, around 2 million men had volunteered for service and nearly 3 million more had been drafted into service. With all those men being deployed into military roles, there was a great need on the home front for civilian workers. The demand for workers was filled by women. Women in the workforce in the USA increased from less than 25% of working age women prior to the war to more than a third (and perhaps almost half) of working age women by the end of the war.
The wartime efforts of women in the United States contribute much to the movement for advancing women's rights and opportunities in this country.
Answer:
Because they protect our basic or in the sense our fundamental rights.
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<u>Secession of provinces</u>
The Katanga province had declared its independence from the Republic of the Congo a few days before the United Nations approved a resolution that authorized the creation of an intervention force. South Kasai seceded a month after Katanga.
<u>Military coups</u>
Col. Joseph Mobutu of the Congolese National Army orchestrated a coup on September 14th, 1960, and forced the Soviets out of the country.
Mobutu started another coup nearly 5 years later and took control over the country. **
<u>Dictatorships</u>
Mobutu started another coup in 1965, and under his control, Congo became a dictatorship. **
<u>Civil war and conflicts</u>
The Congo Crisis was a politically turbulent period that started days after the Congolese gained independence.
According to Article 2 of the 1948 United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide defines genocide as "any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing members of the group
In the late 1800s people in many parts of the world decided to leave their homes and immigrate to the us fleeing crop failure land and job shortages rising taxes and famine many came to the us because it was previewed as the economic opportunity so
Technically they were they were given a far chance but at the same time they had to start over completely and live off of trying to farm they were out on their own.