Which of the following suggests that rising poverty rates are caused by a "culture of poverty" in which young people are encouraged to place short term pleasures ahead of long-term goals?

A) Regulatory policy B) Social policy C) Liberal theory
D) Conservative theory E) Cultural theory


D

Political Science

You might also like to view...

All U.S. presidents must be

a. forty years old and have lived in the United States their whole lives. b. forty-five years old, a lawyer, and have lived in the United States for fifteen years. c. thirty-five years old, have served in elective office, and have lived in the United States for thirty years. d. thirty-seven years old and born in the United States. e. thirty-five years old and a fourteen-year resident of the United States.

Political Science

Praetorianism is

a. the method of controlling bureaucratic appointments during the Soviet period by selecting individuals from a pre-existing list of names. b. a political system where the military is an active participant in politics. c. a setting in which the state focuses on having a strong military force and emphasizes the need to be prepared to use it aggressively. d. the act of overthrowing an existing government. e. a collective, comprised of the heads of the various segments of the armed forces, which oversees policy decisions in some military governments.

Political Science

By 1788, it was clear that the federalists had won the debate over ratification when the Constitution was scheduled to go into effect. How did the federalists win over an American body politic that was, two years earlier, skeptical at best about changing the Articles of Confederation? Though they clearly lost, what effects did the anti-federalists achieve for the political culture of subsequent generations?

What will be an ideal response?

Political Science

It is believed that transnationalism and migration will strengthen the nation-state by creating a sense of "the other" within the state's own borders

Indicate whether this statement is true or false.

Political Science