Answer:
people were starting to use more drugs which means that more people were becoming advanced with how they do things. that said, the criminal justice system needed to become advanced more as well
Free market- a large selection of products is available
limited gov. power- gov. can't define what you can or can't buy/ sell
some gov role -make sure products are fresh and no sell/ buy slave/ mistreated animals
competition- keep quality high and prices low
private ownership- you can "own" things, as long as you pay no one can take away from you
free business- any one can be a store owner as long as you pay for good and license, anyone can sell
<span>The new Constitution and the fourteenth amendment had to be approved. Women gained more rights, and their was a requirment that 1/5 of the state's revenue support public education.</span>
Answer:
The labor system in the early Spanish colonies was based on what is called the encomienda system. An encomendero from Spain was given a certain number of native laborers to help him establish his household and work the land. The native laborers would pay tributes to encomendero and in return he would have to see to their wellbeing and protection.
Explanation:
The first to receive an allotment of native workers under the encomienda system were the Spanish conquerors who came with the Conquest. It was seen as their reward for helping the Spanish Crown to pacify the region and for bringing it under the sovereignty of Spain. As the colonies developed this system was later also transferred to those who were generally well connected or wealthy and could gain the influence to be assigned an encomienda as well. In Peru for example, the encomenderos could make the natives also work for a certain amount of time in the mines, which was a particularly brutal system for extracting the wealth from the colonies in the form of precious metals and sending it back to Spain.
Various push and pull factors.
Possible push factors:
- Famine
- Violence
- Homelessness
Possible pull factors:
- Job opportunities
- Social opportunities
- Safety