The Berlin Conference was called. They adopted an agreement that allowed a European nation to lay claim to an area of Africa.
This is how Britain and Germany's competing claims over East Africa were settled.
It really depends on the specific time period and what kind of tariffs to have an exact answer, but in general the North and West were more pro-tariff, while the South and East opposed them. The Western colonies/states relied heavily on trade with their large plantations of money-crops like tobacco and sugar, and thus saw tariffs as hurting profits from trade. The North did not produce as much crops due to the colder climate and rocky soil, so they saw tariffs as a way to support the national and state governments (After the United States was established). The west similarly did not have as much emphasis on trade, as it was too far from the coast to benefit from trade routes in Europe, thus they sometimes leaned away from being pro-tariff, but not always. There are different kinds of tariffs, from interstate tariffs created after the Revolution, to earlier tariffs with European nations so it's hard to pinpoint an exact answer, but I hope this at least helped.
<u>Each of the civil rights events listed took place in the following locations:</u>
- Birmingham: demonstrations, boycotts, and sit-ins. All these activities integrated the so-called Birmingham Campaign, as it was one of the most segregated cities in the US.
- Washington D.C. : Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech delivered during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963 in front of 250,000 supporters of the Civil Rights Movement. It constituted a direct claim for the end of racism
- Selma: police attacked peaceful marchers outside this city. The march which was peaceful in the beginning is nowadays known as the Bloody Sunday.
- Watts: terrible riots took place here in 1965. A roadside incident escalated to a conflict with police and ended up causing six days of unrest.
- Little Rock: students tried to integrate a school. This conflict required the involvement of the Supreme Court that issued the historic Brown v. Board of Education decision that declared segregated schools to be unconstitutional.
- Montgomery: Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat in the bus in 1956 and it gave rise to the Montgomery bus boycott.
Answer:
C and B
Explanation:
HOW THIS HELPS YALL SMART PPLS ;)