Examples of The American GI Forum in the following topics:
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- Hundreds of thousands of Hispanic American men and women served in the U.S.
- When the United States officially entered World War II, Hispanic Americans were among the many American citizens who joined the ranks of United States Armed Forces as volunteers or through the draft.
- In the European Theater, the majority of Hispanic Americans served in regular units.
- Shortly after the Imperial Japanese Navy launched its surprise attack on the American Naval Fleet at Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces attacked the American positions in the Philippines.
- The American GI Forum was started to ensure the rights of Hispanic World War II veterans.
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- The Mexican American Movement was part of the American Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and 1970s seeking political empowerment and social inclusion for Mexican Americans.
- Like the African American movement, the Mexican American civil rights movement won its earliest victories in the federal courts.
- In 1949 and 1950, the American G.I.
- Forum initiated local "pay your poll tax" drives to register Mexican American voters.
- The equivalent of the Black Power movement among Mexican Americans was the Chicano Movement.
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- The G.I.
- Although the G.I.
- Additionally, banks and mortgage agencies refused loans to African Americans, making the G.I.
- The success of the 1944 G.I.
- A large demand for housing followed from the GI Bill’s mortgage subsidies, leading to the expansion of suburbs and the new American middle class.
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- The messages which circulate on the regulated channels within an organization make up formal communication.
- The American political scientist and communication theorist Harold Lasswell popularized the concept of the communication channel in his 1948 paper The Communication of Ideas.
- The "channel" describes the means by which the information is communicated.
- Face-to-face: One-to-one and one-to-many forums where people are physically present.
- Examples include a variety of types of meetings, including a "cascade" of team meetings or briefings, conferences, site visits, consultation forums, "brown bag" lunches, round-table discussions, and "town meetings. "
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- The higher one's social class, the higher their levels of political participation and political influence.
- In the 2004 election, candidates George W.
- For example, if one attends a public forum, is their opinion likely to be heard, or if they donate money, is a politician likely to support their desired policy?
- Wealthy, well-educated Americans are more likely to vote and to donate money to politicians than lower class individuals.
- During the 1980s, the politics of identity became very prominent and was linked with new social movement activism.
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- Public office attracted many talented young men of ambition to civil service, and colonial North American suffrage was the most widespread in the world at that time; every free white man who owned a certain amount of property was allowed to vote.
- Therefore, while fewer than 1% of British men could vote, a majority of white American men were eligible to vote and run for office.
- Thus, elections became the main forum in which men could profess political allegiances, publicly demonstrating their community civic pride.
- In this respect, the North American colonists differed from their European counterparts, the majority of whom were barred from civic participation.
- From early on in North American colonial development, Americans were exposed to a high degree of political participation and autonomy in their local affairs.
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- Annual births first topped four million in 1954 and did not drop below that figure until 1965, by which time four out of ten Americans were under the age of 20.
- To facilitate the integration process, Congress passed the G.I.
- By the time of the program's end in 1956, roughly 2.2 million veterans had used the G.I.
- The country was living the American dream.
- An estimated 77.3 million Americans were born during this demographic boom in births.
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- The GI underground press produced a few hundred titles during the Vietnam War.
- Some were produced by anti-war GI coffeehouses, and many of them were small, crudely produced, and low-circulation papers.
- Three or four GI underground papers had large-scale, national distribution of more than 20,000 copies, including thousands of copies mailed to GIs overseas.
- The Beat Generation was a group of American post-World War II writers who came to prominence in the 1950s, including the cultural phenomena they documented and inspired.
- The End of the Beats and the Beginning of the Hippies
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- The core of the WTO is the most-favored nation (MFN) rule, which states that each WTO member must be charged the lowest tariffs that an importer places on any country.
- The APEC forum is particularly interesting in the context of the above agreements, as it is slightly less formal than the above two (it is referred to as a 'forum').
- The APEC forum is a cooperative discussion between 21 countries in the Pacific Rim region promoting free trade, with a focus on newly industrialized economies (NIE).
- This map outlines each of the countries involved in the North American Free Trade Agreement, an international trade agreement focused on a geographic proximity.
- The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) is a forum of 21 countries in the Pacific Rim region, focusing on free trade and economic cooperation.
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- Trade barriers remain high, especially in the service and agricultural sectors, where American producers are especially competitive.
- The United States also is seeking trade liberalization agreements with Asian countries through the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum; APEC members reached an agreement on information technology in the late 1990s.
- Separately, Americans are discussing U.S.
- -Africa forum.
- In the 1990s, the U.S. trade deficit with China grew to exceed even the American trade gap with Japan.