"Consequences of polygamy" Essays and Research Papers

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    Many in today’s society do not agree with the idea of polygamy‚ but 2‚500 years ago polygamy was a found in most places all over the world. Although older day polygamy and modern day polygamy have many similarities‚ places and religions that accept polygamy‚ restrictions and the types of polygamy have changed over the years. Polygamy is the practice or custom of having more than one wife or husband at the same time. Polygamy dates back to a long time ago‚ since this has been practiced for

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    THE EFFECTS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION 1.- Population and Economic Growth One of the most important changes was the continuous expansion of the population and the economy. Most observers in the eighteenth century did not believe that expansion of the population and the economy could be sustained indefinitely. The population had consistently expanded as the greater agricultural productivity permitted maintaining an adequate food supply. The industrial economy had been able to employ large numbers

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    Consequences Of Migration

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    Evaluate the causes and effects of migration between Mexico and the USA Migration is moving from a place to another and intending to settle there. Mexicans migrate to the USA‚ but there are many reasons why. Push and pull factors are why they move. A push factor is something that is negative and pushes them away‚ like war‚ poverty and lack of opportunities. Meanwhile a pull factor is something positive that pulls them to a place like‚ better jobs‚ healthcare and lifestyle. There are multiple push

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    Premarital Sex and its Consequences. Premarital sex and its consequences are two enties that are exclusively inseperable.Absolutely there is no premarital sex without its consequences. The scientific law of input and output strongly apply here‚ for every inputted activity done either consciously and willingly or done unconsciously and unwillingly will always produce a desired or undesired output. It is important to realize that the principle of retributive justice requires an exact correlation

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    Monogamy versus Polygamy and Other Forms of Marriage Rasheedah Tyler COM/155 5/3/2013 Tiffany Nelson Monogamy versus Polygamy and Other Forms of Marriage “I believe in monogamy if that is what a couple decides upon together‚ but it all depends on the personal history and culture of the two involved.” -K. D. Lang. The traditional family system--a lifelong alliance of a man and a woman--has in the past served as an institution for mobilizing the economic‚ moral‚ and emotional resources needed

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    History supported the act of polygamy in early Mormonism that caused women to be labeled as merchandise by their ability to reproduce and household abilities. This act of polygamy was important to American religious history because it caused the government to create anti-polygamy laws to protect Mormon women. The founder of the Mormon church‚ Joseph Smith‚ experienced a powerful experience with God‚ he told Joseph to practice polygamy. God explained the reason for polygamy was to procreate and expand

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    Dominican Republic and Haiti: Consequences of the regularization process The island of Hispaniola‚ which Dominicans share with Haitians‚ is considered to be the cradle of blackness in the Americas. It was one of the first territories that colonizers brought African slaves to labor. Since then‚ there has always been a dispute between the two sides of the island. One side defending the ideology of European heritage while the other side stands to beliefs and practices of African descendants. There

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    Other impacts can have permanent consequences. Pollution effects are not confined to the environment. The potential for damage to historical monuments has already been realized. Some damage‚ such as from wind or rain‚ is unavoidable. However‚ pollution contributes additional risk factors that can increase the level of destruction. The effects may be minor‚ such as a blackening of the surface of monuments due to dust. Other impacts can have permanent consequences. Pollution effects are not confined

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    Evaluate the consequences of migration Migration is regarded to be the transfer of people from one place to another. This constantly increasing phenomenon is the result of different factors such as globalization or if we enter in more detail‚ what we call push and pull factors or even compulsory migration due to war or social complications. Nowadays‚ migration has become a subject of controversy. There is been in the last decades serious limitations to one the most important freedoms the human

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    Unintended consequences are situations where an action results in an outcome that is not what is intended. The unintended results may be foreseen or unforeseen‚ but they are almost always logical or likely results of the action. These consequences could be positive or negative‚ but it is often said that almost all human actions have at least one unintended consequence. In other words‚ each cause has more than one effect‚ including unforeseen effects. A real-world example of this is the Treaty of

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