seeing as every nation is in different geographic locations they all need different nedds and they will not agree to everything that the other nations want
The main reason that the League of Nations failed, was that the countries only thought for themselves.The absence of the U.S. was a large factor in the failure of the League of Nations, but the root cause of the failure of the League was that it had no real power.
The League of Nations was viewed by the world as "the league of the victors of World War 1" rather than a fair league for all nations. Most nations ignored the League and their goals therefore the League did little to prevent World War 2. The Treaty of Versailles was also connected to the League of Nations and many nations resented that Treaty. This was a major contributing factor of the reasons for World War 2 being started and fought.
The League of Nations was viewed by the world as "the league of the victors of World War 1" rather than a fair league for all nations. Most nations ignored the League and their goals therefore the League did little to prevent World War 2. The Treaty of Versailles was also connected to the League of Nations and many nations resented that Treaty. This was a major contributing factor of the reasons for World War 2 being started and fought.
The absence of the U.S. was a large factor in the failure of the League of Nations, but the root cause of the failure of the League was that it had no real power. It was essentially the U.N. without a securtity council to enforce it's directives.
is a factor that contributes towards some activity or function
Capital is the only resource or factor of production that nations can significantly increase in the short term.
Member nations must volunteer to provide the troops.
is a factor that contributes towards some activity or function
Corruption, lack of qualified skill power and poverty are some of the factors that prevent nations from being industrialized. Lack of infrastructure is the other factor.
No, but Yes. It depends how sucky or good your school is. My Highschool's Biology teacher had 75% of her students failing. But she didn't get fired.There is a lot more to this than just failing students. Teachers have evaluations and if she failed to address problems found in an evaluation that could lead to dismissal. If she is a senior teacher that is a factor, and if due process is followed in any actions against her that is also a factor. There are many things involved in this and each teacher is different.
It depends where the centre of enlargement (dilation) was; it can be any value.As all you have given us is the change in the coordinate of the A vertex, so all we can conclude is that the centre of enlargement is somewhere along the line y + 2x = 0.Examples:If the centre is at (3, -6) then the scale factor is -6If the centre is at (0.5, -1) then the scale factor is -1If the centre is at (0, 0) then the scale factor is -3/4If the centre is at (-3, 6) then the scale factor is 0If the centre is at (-4, 8) then the scale factor is 1/8If the centre is at (-10, 20) then the scale factor is 1/2If the centre is at (11, -22) then the scale factor is 2If the centre is at (1.4, -2.8) then the scale factor is 6(As the centre tends towards ±∞ the scale factor tends towards 1 [from below towards -∞, from above towards +∞].)
Jack Ernest Vincent has written: 'Support patterns at the United Nations' -- subject(s): Commissions, United Nations 'Factor analysis in international relations' -- subject(s): Factor analysis, International relations, Research