The Roe v. Wade case was one that deal with the constitutionality (aka legality) of the issue of abortion. In this case, the Supreme Court broke new ground by discussing how the right of a woman to have an abortion could be considered part of their 14th amendment rights. In this case, the justices ruled 7-2 that women have a right to privacy in terms of an abortion according to the 14th amendment.
However, the state where it is taking place does have a right to regulate abortions. The state must consider factors such as the health of the woman who is pregnant and the possible life of the fetus.
Answer:
Women Suffrage
A) Disagreements between N.W.P. and N.A.W.S.A:
1. State vs Federal Suffrage: The N.W.P. prioritized the passage of a constitutional amendment at the federal level ensuring women's suffrage throughout the United States. The N.A.W.S.A tried to gain women's suffrage at the state level.
2. Aggression and Calmness: The N.W.P favored the use of aggressive and violent public demonstrations, including protests, lobbying and petitioning, parades, pageant, and picketing to campaign for constitutional amendments at the federal level to enforce equal rights between women and men. They rioted at the White House, suffered arrests, imprisonment, and were sexually assaulted by the Police.
3. Use of Referenda and Constitutional Amendments: The N.W.P. focused on the federal government to obtain a constitutional amendment that would be applicable to all states. On the other hand, the N.A.W.S.A favored the use of referenda at state levels to pass individual state suffrage laws.
B) N.A.W.S.A was not favorably disposed to the protests organized by the N.W.P. as they had adopted non-aggressive approaches.
Explanation:
a) Women Suffrage: The constitutional amendment adopted in 1920 that guarantees women the right to vote and be voted for.
b) N.W.P means the National Woman's Party. It broke away from the much larger National American Woman Suffrage Association.
c) N.A.W.S.A means the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
Both Catholics and Protestants considered the Malleus Maleficarum (also known as <em>Hammer of Witches</em>) by Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger as an authoritative work on witchcraft.
This 1487-book it is considered by many as the most famous work of witchcraft ever written during. The book became an important source for Protestants and Catholics during the "fight" against witchcraft during the Inquisition.
The discovery changed the way people live because they found land and they found food. They also made food. That is how the discovery changed humans lives.