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Social Issues

10_commandment

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Paul Monachino, Patrick Sayers, and Grace Mahoney 2/11/14 Explaining the Sixth Commandment: You shall not commit adultery: You have heard that it was said, 'You shall not commit adultery. But we say to you that everyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart." The sixth commandment upholds chastity as a moral virtue, a gift from God, a grace, a fruit of spiritual effort. Chastity is a moral virtue. The Holy Spirit enables one whom the water of baptism has renewed to imitate the purity of Christ.

abortion

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ABORTION Reasons for, advantages and disadvantages of abortions ABORTION ? An abortion is the termination of a pregnancy by the removal or expulsion from the uterus of a foetus or embryo. An abortion can occur spontaneously due to complications during pregnancy or can be induced. ?Medical ?Surgical ?other METHODS OF CARRYING OUT AN ABORTION METHODS OF CARRYING OUT ABORTIONS MEDICAL METHOD ?Medical abortions" are non-surgical abortions that use pharmaceutical drugs, and are only effective in the first trimester of pregnancy. METHODS OF CARRYING OUT ABORTIONS SURGICAL METHOD ? In the first 12 weeks, suction-aspiration or vacuum abortion is the most common method. In manual vacuum aspiration

AP Human Geography The Cultural Landscape Vocab Ch. 8

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Balance of Power Boundary City-State Colonialism Colony Compact state Elongated state Federal state Fragmented state Frontier Gerrymandering Imperialism Landlocked state Microstate Perforated state Prorupted state Sovereignty State Unitary state
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AP Human Geography The Cultural Landscape Vocab Ch. 7

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Apartheid Balkanization Balkanized Blockbusting Centripetal force Ethnic cleansing Ethnicity Multi ethnic state Multinational state Nationalism Nationality Nation-state Race Racism Racist
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AP Human Geography The Cultural Landscape Vocab Ch. 3

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Brain drain Chain migration Circulation Counter urbanization Emigration Floodplain Forced migration Guest workers Immigration Internal migration International migration Interregional migration Intervening obstacle Intraregional migration Migration Migration transition Mobility Net migration Pull factor Push factor Quotas Refugees Unauthorized immigrants Voluntary migration
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AP Human Geography The Cultural Landscape Vocab Ch. 2

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Agricultural density: Agricultural revolution: Arithmetic density: Census: Crude birth rate: Crude birth rate: Demographic transition: Demography: Dependency ratio: Doubling time: Ecumene Epidemiologic transition Industrial revolution Infant mortality rate Life expectancy Medical revolution Natural increase rate Overpopulation Pandemic Physiological density Population pyramid Sex ratio Total fertility rate Zero population growth
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Polygamy Research Paper

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By definition, polygamy is the practice or custom of having more than one wife or husband at the same time. Continuing from biblical times, polygamy has been commonly associated with the Mormon Church and television shows like Big Love or Sister Wives. Due to diverging beliefs between polygamists and monogamists on the sanctity of marriage and relationships, those who have multiple partners are looked at as pariahs and their beliefs as taboo. An analysis of the structure of polygamy reveals that it provides unity and financial stability; and should not be punishable or illegal.

Early colonies of America notes 2

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?PAGE ? ?PAGE ?2? Ch. 3-5 Notes ? Colony Notes Outline #2 The Bonds of Empire: 1660-1750 The Dominion of New England -1684- King revokes Bay Colony charter WHY? -crown wanted to rule w/o Puritan influence -Mass. was ignoring Navigation Acts (they were smuggling) -get rid of Representative Assemblies -wanted military men to be Governors (strong military rule) -king had been told by ?fact finders? to the colonies that the Puritans weren?t popular in Mass. WHAT MADE PURITANS UNPOPULAR? YOU HAD TO BE A PURITAN SAINT WHO HAD A CONVERSION EXPERIENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!! <<<<<< Sir Edmond Andros -Governor appointed by King -What Andros did? -levied taxes -no land before the Domination was recognized -land owners forced to agree to quitrents -enforced Navigation Acts

Sociology "Race and Ethnicity"

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Chapter 8 Race and Ethnicity as Lived Experience Chapter Study Outline Defining Race and Ethnicity Race is a socially defined category, based on real or perceived biological differences between groups of people. Ethnicity is a socially defined category based on common language, religion, nationality, history, or another cultural factor. Sociologists see race and ethnicity as social constructions because they are not rooted in biological differences, they change over time, and they never have firm boundaries. Symbolic ethnicity is an ethnic identity that is only relevant on specific occasions and does not significantly impact everyday life. Situational ethnicity is an ethnic identity that can be either displayed or concealed depending on its usefulness in a given situation.

Sociology "Social Class"

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Chapter 7 Social Class: The Structure of Inequality Social Stratification and Social Inequality Social stratification is the division of society into groups arranged in a social hierarchy. Social stratification is a characteristic of society (not individuals) and can persist over generations. Systems of Stratification Slavery is the most extreme system of social stratification and is based on the legal ownership of people. A caste system is a form of social stratification in which status is determined by one?s family history and background and cannot be changed.

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