What are the possible implications for women who live in a society that does not speak much about or address miscarriage, abortion, and infertility, although they are all fairly common?

What will be an ideal response?


There are various implications for women who live in a society that does not speak much about or address miscarriage, abortion, and infertility. When women don’t discuss these topics and experiences with one another, it becomes difficult to know how to support one another or who you can reach out to if you need that social support. This can lead to depression, anxiety, and overwhelming feelings that women must endure seemingly alone. The social stigma and miseducation around these topics can do damage to women’s physical and mental health.

History

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The inventor of the cotton gin was ________

Fill in the blank(s) with correct word

History

How did the Enlightenment transform the way people thought in the eighteenth century? Describe the ideology of the Enlightenment

What will be an ideal response?

History

On July 14, in the first year of the French Revolution, the storming of what political prison provided a revolutionary symbol?

A) Tuileries B) Place des Vosges C) Versailles D) Bastille

History

Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)

1. Messner and Bozada-Deas found that the gendered division of labor among men and women volunteers in youth coaching results from an accumulation of individual choices in whether and how to participate. 2. Most of the men coaches saw the gendered division of labor among parent volunteers in community youth sports in essentialist terms. 3. According to Messner and Bozada-Deas, asking people to explain how and why things such as gendered divisions of labor persist is a reliable basis for building an explanation. 4. Messner and Bozada-Deas analyzed the American Youth Soccer Organization and the Little League Baseball/Softball yearbooks for the Roseville community (1999–2007), finding that fewer than 10% of the soccer league coaches were women.

History