<span>The sociologist Howard S. Becker introduced the above
theories. Becker is a well-known theorist in the sociological domains of Crime
and Deviance, and the sociology of Art and Music. His most cited theory is the labeling theory. The labeling theory states that if an individual is labelled
a ‘criminal’ or ‘deviant’ by members of society, he or she is likely to engage
in such behavior and become a true deviant or criminal. </span>
Answer:
The sleeper effect.
Explanation:
As the exercise presents, Jamie heard about a divorce that was published in the RAG MAG, which she does not believe is very reliable. However, over time, she forgot where she heard about the divorce. The fact that she later came to believe the story was true is known as the sleeper effect. The sleeper effect is, as suggested, a psychological phenomenon that relates to persuasion. It is a delayed increase of the effect of a message that is accompanied by a discounting cue. So, in this case, Jamie heard statement X from place A. After some time, she forgot where she had heard it, but the information (statement X) remained in her mind.
Answer: 1. To create Sinhala Dominance, the government introduced a majority measure. An Act to accept Sinhala as the only official language, thus disregarding Tamil
2. Governments have adopted preferential policies that have benefited Sinhala candidates for university and government positions.
Explanation:
Answer:
The statement is true.
Explanation:
The study determined that success in terms of earnings in the later years of life had little to do with where the candidate went to college and more so influenced by personal attributes and skills. It showed this by studying candidates who chose to not attend Ivy League schools and instead chose less prestigious schools.