In the political arena the importance of organization‚ rallies‚ and lobbying are essential. The poor and disadvantaged are not always represented in the same fashions as others are. The poor cannot always find the transportation to visit their representative’s offices to voice their concerns‚ and most often do not vote as often as the non-poor population. The subject of the poor‚ and help for the poor are not always at the top of the list for county meetings‚ or representative meetings. Formalization
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held many negative attitudes towards the poor themselves and the idlers who they believed were a menace to society. Also during this time period the Europeans had many responses like in England where they put them in poorhouses or tried to heal them or in others places where they tried to give them alms. During this time period many Europeans held negative attitudes toward helping the poor due to the idle and lazy who go around begging as if they are poor. Emperor Charles V in a royal decree wrote
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First published by Benjamin Franklin in 1732‚ "Poor Richard’s Almanack" was a guide to both weather forecasts and wise sayings. Franklin used the pseudonym Richard Saunders in writing the text‚ which became an annual publication up until 1757. Response to the almanac was tremendous‚ and it sold as many as 10‚000 issues a year. Second only to the bible‚ "Poor Richard’s Almanack" was one of the most popular and purchased publications in colonial America. The almanac stressed the two qualities Franklin
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Life for the poor in Elizabethan England was very harsh. Unemployment and rapid price inflation increased causing many villagers to leave their homes and come to the towns to look for work. However‚ they often could not find employment and ended up begging in the streets. Elizabethan Poor Laws‚ enacted in 1601‚ were incredibly beneficial in uniting the community to provide care and nurture for the qualifying less fortunate. These laws set a critical foundation for Britain’s welfare system and established
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Impact * Pro-Poor tourism (PPT) - Results in increased net benefits for poor people. Tourism is often claimed to be the largest industry in the world‚ thus creating both opportunities and responsibilities. Tourism can make a positive difference – and it should. Tourism can bring great benefits to local communities but only if it brings sustainable livelihoods‚ employment or additional incomes. The same approaches which have been developed to benefit the economically poor through tourism can
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taxes are lower then there would be more help for the poor because there would be more business and employment opportunities available for them to get a descent paycheck every week to feed‚ and cloth their family. You might be asking‚ why do I have to help the poor? Well children as they grow up in poverty‚ it seems more likely to have poor health care later in life when compared to those children who are not poor. When compared to non-poor children‚ children in poverty are somewhat more likely
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Working Poor Test In “The Working Poor” Shipler gives an example of a poor grandmother named Leetha Butler who lived in Washington‚ D.C. and how even though she has very little in terms of finances her spirit and wits are exceedingly high considering her situation of poverty and how she takes care of her daughters orphaned children ages three‚ eight and sixteen (Shipler 29). After her daughter Diane was murdered in a drive-by-shooting‚ she did not collapse under the weight of grief because she understood
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EFFECTS OF POOR PLANNING 1. Management is defined as the process of coordinating and integrating work and activities so that they are completed efficiently and effectively with and through other people. Broadly speaking management can also be defined as the activity in which managers are involved. While the job of no two managers is alike‚ researchers and management writers have developed some specific categorization schemes to describe the activity in which managers are involved. Traditionally
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Myths: 1. People are poor because they are lazy. Of poor people‚ 16 years and older 12% work full time year round‚ and another 25% work part time. 2. Most poor people are minorities. Almost 43% of people living in poverty are white. In proportions however‚ African Americans and Latinos are much more likely to be poor than Asian Americans and whites. 3. Most poor people live in inner cities. 33% of the poor live in inner cities‚ but the rest live in urban areas‚ the suburbs‚ small towns
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Theoretical Aspects of Pro-poor Tourism Page 7...…………………………………………… (B) Positive and Negative Example of Pro-Poor Practices Page 10....…………………………………………. (C) Local Participation and Pro-poor Tourism Debates Page 12……………………………………………. (D) Discussion on How Pro-Poor Tourism can Sustain Local Area Page 14……………………………………………. (E) Conclusion Page 17……………………………………………. Works Cited The following paper provides research‚ review‚ and analysis of different aspects of pro-poor tourism. Firstly‚
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