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LuckyWell [14K]
3 years ago
12

What happens if we resolve armed conflicts and civil wars ?Explanation

History
1 answer:
svlad2 [7]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Conflict resolution allows for constructive change to occur. If problems and disagreements are ignored rather than being handled constructively, things can only go one of two ways; either things stay the same, or they get worse.

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Can someone put these three words in a paragraph
stiks02 [169]
When the country mobilized it’s troops, it gave the illusion it was going to attack it’s neighboring country. This caused an evacuation of that country.
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2 years ago
When the Catholic Church weakened why did that help Queen Elizabeth's protestant cause? WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST I DONT CARE AS LONG
saul85 [17]

Answer:

Protestants and Catholics

They felt that the church was corrupt. They also attacked the 'cult of saints' – they argued that relics were fakes which could not cure illness or perform miracles. They believed that the Catholic Church simply used them to make money.

6 0
3 years ago
The most famous battle of WWII was known as Operation Overlord, but we now simply call it D-Day. During this battle, Allied forc
Ksenya-84 [330]

Answer:

The beaches of Normandy in france

Explanation:

when the allied invasion began the US, the British, and Canadian forces made amphibious assault on the beaches of Normandy

4 0
3 years ago
Peloponnesian war summary own words please!.
Anettt [7]

Answer:

Peloponnesian War, (431–404 BCE), war fought between the two leading city-states in ancient Greece, Athens and Sparta. Each stood at the head of alliances that, between them, included nearly every Greek city-state. The fighting engulfed virtually the entire Greek world, and it was properly regarded by Thucydides, whose contemporary account of it is considered to be among the world’s finest works of history, as the most momentous war up to that time

Explanation:

The Athenian alliance was, in fact, an empire that included most of the island and coastal states around the northern and eastern shores of the Aegean Sea. Sparta was leader of an alliance of independent states that included most of the major land powers of the Peloponnese and central Greece, as well as the sea power Corinth. Thus, the Athenians had the stronger navy and the Spartans the stronger army. Further, the Athenians were better prepared financially than their enemies, owing to the large war chest they had amassed from the regular tribute they received from their empire.

Athens and Sparta had fought each other before the outbreak of the Great Peloponnesian War (in what is sometimes called the First Peloponnesian War) but had agreed to a truce, called the Thirty Years’ Treaty, in 445. In the following years their respective blocs observed an uneasy peace. The events that led to renewed hostilities began in 433, when Athens allied itself with Corcyra (modern Corfu), a strategically important colony of Corinth. Fighting ensued, and the Athenians then took steps that explicitly violated the Thirty Years’ Treaty. Sparta and its allies accused Athens of aggression and threatened war.On the advice of Pericles, its most influential leader, Athens refused to back down. Diplomatic efforts to resolve the dispute failed. Finally, in the spring of 431, a Spartan ally, Thebes, attacked an Athenian ally, Plataea, and open war began.The years of fighting that followed can be divided into two periods, separated by a truce of six years. The first period lasted 10 years and began with the Spartans, under Archidamus II, leading an army into Attica, the region around Athens. Pericles declined to engage the superior allied forces and instead urged the Athenians to keep to their city and make full use of their naval superiority by harassing their enemies’ coasts and shipping. Within a few months, however, Pericles fell victim to a terrible plague that raged through the crowded city, killing a large part of its army as well as many civilians. Thucydides survived an attack of the plague and left a vivid account of its impact on Athenian morale. In the meantime (430–429), the Spartans attacked Athenian bases in western Greece but were repulsed. The Spartans also suffered reverses at sea. In 428 they tried to aid the island state of Lesbos, a tributary of Athens that was planning to revolt. But the revolt was headed off by the Athenians, who won control of the chief city, Mytilene. Urged on by the demagogue Cleon, the Athenians voted to massacre the men of Mytilene and enslave everyone else, but they relented the next day and killed only the leaders of the revolt. Spartan initiatives during the plague years were all unsuccessful except for the capture of the strategic city Plataea in 427.

5 0
3 years ago
Which political theory offers an explanation for why policies are often more responsive to the interests of particular groups th
Jobisdone [24]

Answer:

bureaucratic rule

elitism

majoritarianism

pluralism

8 0
3 years ago
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