What do the examples of “third gender” that are explored in “Global Perspective: Different Societies, Different Genders” demonstrate?
a. The hijras of South Asia are the equivalent of transgender persons in the Western context.
b. Gender expression is more important than biological sex.
c. Sociologists and anthropologists are important actors in the creation of gender expression.
d. Sex and gender in some non-Western cultures defy the binary classification of male and female.
d. Sex and gender in some non-Western cultures defy the binary classification of male and female.
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Experiments sometimes include measuring the variable/concept twice. This technique is known as a _____
a. sample and population b. primary test and secondary test c. pretest and posttest d. control and experiment
The dominant type of energy required for societies until 1750 was:
a. steam. b. coal. c. nuclear. d. fire.
Compared to college students of the late 1960s, more of today's college students are concerned with ________
a. developing a philosophy of life. b. making money. c. seeking justice in the world. d. being involved in political affairs.
Ann is a graduate student interested in researching the number of people moving from Canada to the United States as a proportion of the population in the United States. Ann will use which demographic rate in her research?
a. mortality rates b. total fertility rates c. migration rates d. movement rates