In trying to make sense of FDR's domestic policies, historians and political scientists have referred to a "First New Deal," which lasted from 1933 to 1935, and a "Second New Deal," which stretched from 1935 to 1938. (Some scholars believe that a "Third New Deal" began in 1937 but never took root; the descriptor, likewise, has never gained significant currency.) These terms, it should be remembered, are the creations of scholars trying to impose order and organization on the Roosevelt administration's often chaotic, confusing, and contradictory attempts to combat the depression; Roosevelt himself never used them. The idea of a "first "and "second" New Deal is useful insofar as it reflects important shifts in the Roosevelt administration's approach to the nation's economic and social woes. But the boundaries between the first and second New Deals should be viewed as porous rather than concrete. In other words, significant continuities existed between the first and second New Deals that should not be overlooked.
A lguna
B ase que
S ustente
O encuentre
L libertad, fraternidad,
U tilidad,
T endencia a la
I gualdad en un
S istema absolutista?
M uy díficil, imposible, sin
O portunidad de lograr.
<em>D. city-states developed mostly independent of each other</em>
The mountainous geography of Greece functioned as natural borders between different settlements. The early Greeks settled in the habitable land between the mountains, which later led to large city-states developing in those areas between the mountains. The mountains would act as borders between the various city-states of Greece.