Answer each question below in 90 or MORE words each. I will provide the required materials. Cite and reference each answer. Discuss each question like you are discussing with a student, what is interesting and your thoughts. They are due in 24 hours or less, I will pay 25 ONLY! Please do not reply if you want more money, don’t waste my time or your time trying to get more money!!! There are 11 for now, there will be a total of 12 due the next question will be due in 12 hours from which asked for. Follow all my instructions do not deviate or be late I will dispute and ask for refund. NO PLAGIARISM!
CH12
In case anyone is interested, PBS developed a wonderful documentary on Muhammad and the establishment of Islam. It is quite long, but you might find it useful when addressing the questions this week.
Sunnis and Sh’ites
1. What are the differences between Sunni orthodoxy and the Shi’ite perspective?
2. Who were the Sufi?
3. Why were they important to the spread of Islam?
4. How did this religious diversity shape Muslim societies?
Muhammad and Isiam
5. Who was Muhammad?
6. What are the similarities between Muhammad’s and other religious leaders’ lives?
7. What are the differences?
CH13
Visual sources
8. Review the images of the Sultan Hasan Madrasa and Tomb-Mosque, the Tomb of Timur, the Alhambra, and the Qutb Minar in Ch. 13 of the text. How do visual sources help historians understand the Islamic world from 1000-1500?
Review the resources and essays at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History that cover the cultures studied this week.
Aztecs
9. The Aztecs built their civilization through conquest and tributary peoples. Considering the Aztec military, political, and religious systems, why was human sacrifice significant to the Aztecs?
10. What purpose did it serve?
Analyzing History
11. How does analyzing eyewitness accounts, writings, and oral traditions differ from examining material artifacts?
Gender Based Violence
1. Use data to your advantage
Identifying the problem is the first step towards change. Statistics can shock governments into action. This was the case in Kiribati.
A 2008 study found 68 per cent of girls and women who had been in an intimate relationship had experienced some form of violence. This figure gave the government – with the help of women’s organisations, the UN and international aid agencies – the impetus to try to bring about change.
2. Build on existing systems
Governments don’t always have the money to invest in new programmes – this was certainly the case in Kiribati. Instead, they need to tap into existing systems.
Of course, the police, justice, health and social welfare sectors must first work together to respond to existing violence. But to stop violence before it starts, the everyday work of sectors such as education, health and labour needs to be harnessed – to help build environments where girls and women are respected as equals, and violence is not accepted.
In response to that 2008 report, Kiribati’s schools are now changing their curriculums to include teaching about respectful relationships, gender equality and preventing violence. They’re also training teachers to counsel students who have experienced violence, or are living with it at home. This provides children and young people with alternative models, and the skills they need to create non-violent and equal relationships of their own.
Continuing support from trained specialists and women’s organisations is crucial to the success of this approach. Tapping into the experience of organisations such as the Fiji Women’s Crisis Centre and the Tongan Women and Children’s Crisis Centre, Kiribati stakeholders are working hard to establish their first independent and multi-disciplinary Women’s and Children’s Support Centre.
3. Tackle wider inequality issues
Individual programmes will only help the participants. There needs to be a more co-ordinated approach to tackle gender inequality, gender stereotyping and social norms around violence.
In Kiribati, the changes to the education curriculum can be backed up by increasing girls’ participation in sports clubs or a social marketing campaign. For adults it could involve working with faith and other community leaders, or going from village to village educating people about law reform and gender equality – something the Women’s Development Division and Kiribati police are doing on the outer islands.
The idea is to reach out to boys and men, and to empower girls and women by giving them knowledge and tools to shape their own futures.
4. Monitor short- and medium-term success indicators
Reducing levels of violence takes a long time: even well-funded initiatives might take five to 10 years to make a real impact – and they need to be carefully monitored to make sure the impact is the right one.
This can make it tough to maintain momentum, so you need to look at how to measure the progress that comes before that. Attitudinal surveys are one way to assess smaller developments such as acceptance of the issue and changing attitudes to gender equality.
In Kiribati, they’re only just starting the long journey toward social change. The changes outlined in points 2 and 3 are still in their infancy, but by transforming practices that keep girls and women from fully participating in schools and workplaces, they’re starting to see the progress that unfolds when girls and women are full contributors.
After three years they’ve found that people are starting to see there’s a problem and that they can do something about it. That’s progress – and it’s helping to maintain the momentum for change.
5. Be prepared for a backlash
See backlash as a sign of success. It means that people sense that things are changing. Change is always worrying for some members of any community. In Kiribati, when the Women’s Development Division raised awareness about domestic violence, some people would say things like: “You’re ruining our women,” or “This is our culture,” but really they’re just reacting to a change in the status quo. Donors and decision-makers must be prepared for this, and see it as a sign of progress. That’s why point four is so important if you’re going to see change through.
Above all, community conversations and debate about these issues must be welcomed and facilitated – with girls and women having a clear voice. They’re the key to creating lasting change.
What have you learned about preventing violence against girls and women? Tell us on Facebook and Twitter
Find out more about programmes working to end gender-based violence
Forms Of Gender based Violence
Facts on Gender Based Violence
Forms of Violence against Women
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE is not an isolated, individual event, but rather a pattern of
perpetrator behaviors used against a victim. The pattern consists of a variety of abusive acts,
occurring in multiple episodes over the course of the relationship. Some episodes consist of a
sustained attack with one tactic repeated many times (e.g., punching), combined with a
variety of other tactics (such as name calling, threats, or attacks against property). Other
episodes consist of a single act (e.g., a slap, a “certain look”). One tactic (e.g., physical assault)
may be used infrequently, while other types of abuse (such as name calling or intimidating
gestures) may be used daily. Some parts of the pattern are crimes in most countries (e.g.,
physical assault, sexual assault, menacing, arson, kidnapping, harassment) while other
battering acts are not illegal (e.g., name calling, interrogating children, denying the victim
access to the family automobile). All parts of the pattern interact with each other and can
have profound physical and emotional effects on victims. Victims respond to the entire
pattern of perpetrators’ abuse rather than simply to one episode or one tactic.
PHYSICAL VIOLENCE
Physical abuse may include spitting, scratching, biting, grabbing, shaking, shoving, pushing,
restraining, throwing, twisting, slapping (with open or closed hand), punching, choking,
burning, and/or use of weapons (e.g., household objects, knives, guns) against the victim.
The physical assaults may or may not cause injuries.
TYPES OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE
Sexual violence can take many forms and take place under very different circumstances. A
person can be sexually violated by one individual or several people (e.g. gang-rapes); the
incident may be planned or a surprise attack. Although sexual violence occurs most
commonly in the victim’s home (or in the perpetrator’s home), it also takes place in many
other settings, such as the workplace, at school, in prisons, cars, the streets or open spaces
(e.g. parks, farmland). The perpetrator of a sexual assault may be a date, an acquaintance, a
friend, a family member, an intimate partner or former intimate partner, or a complete
stranger, but more often than not, is someone known to the victim. There is no stereotypical
perpetrator; sexually violent men come from all backgrounds, rich and poor, academic and
uneducated, religious and non-religious. Perpetrators may be persons in positions of
authority who are respected and trusted (e.g. a doctor, teacher, tourist guide, priest, police
The Health System Response to Gender-Based Violence in EECA: A programmatic package
2
officer) and thus less likely to be suspected of sexual violence. Sexual violence is common in
situations of war and armed conflict. Specifically, rape and sexual torture are frequently used
as weapons to demoralize the enemy; women are sometimes forced into “temporary
marriages” with enemy soldiers. Women who are incarcerated may be subjected to sexual
violence by prison guards and police officers. Other forms of sexual violence include, but are
not limited to:
sexual slavery; sexual harassment (including demands for sex in exchange for job promotion
or advancement or higher school marks or grades); trafficking for purposes of forced
prostitution; forced exposure to pornography; forced pregnancy; forced sterilization; forced
abortion; forced marriage; female genital mutilation;
(WHO Guidelines for Medico-legal care of victims of Sexual Violence, page 7 to 8)
PSYCHOLOGICAL VIOLENCE
There are different types of psychological assaults.
Threats of violence and harm
The perpetrator’s threats of violence or harm may be directed against the victim or others
important to the victim or they may be suicide threats. Sometimes the threat includes killing
the victim and others and then committing suicide. The threats may be made directly with
words (e.g., “I’m going to kill you,” “No one is going to have you,” “Your mother is going to
pay,” “I cannot live without you”) or with actions (e.g., stalking, displaying weapons, hostage
taking, suicide attempts).
Emotional violence
Emotional abuse is a tactic of control that consists of a wide variety of verbal attacks and
humiliations, including repeated verbal attacks against the victim’s worth as an individual or
role as a parent, family member, friend, co-worker, or community member. In domestic
violence, verbal attacks and other tactics of control are intertwined with the threat of harm in
order to maintain the perpetrator’s dominance through fear. While repeated verbal abuse is
damaging to partners and relationships over time, it alone does not establish the same
climate of fear as verbal abuse combined with the use or threat of physical harm.
Emotional abuse may also include humiliating the victim in front of family, friends or
strangers. Perpetrators may repeatedly claim that victims are crazy, incompetent, and unable
“to do anything right.” Not all verbal insults between partners are acts of violence. In order
for verbal abuse to be considered domestic violence, it must be part of a pattern of coercive
behaviors in which the perpetrator uses or threatens to use physical force.
The Health System Response to Gender-Based Violence in EECA: A programmatic package
3
Isolation
Perpetrators often try to control victims’ time, activities and contact with others. They gain
control over them through a combination of isolating and disinformation tactics. Isolating
tactics may become more overtly abusive over time. Through incremental isolation, some
perpetrators increase their psychological control to the point where they determine reality for
the victims. Perpetrators’ use of disinformation tactics such as distorting what is real through
lying, providing contradictory information, or withholding information is compounded by the
forced isolation of the victims. For example, perpetrators may lie to victims about their legal
rights or the outcomes of medical interventions. While many victims are able to maintain
their independent thoughts and actions, others believe what the perpetrators say because the
victims are isolated from contrary information. Through his victim’s isolation, the
perpetrator prevents discovery of the abuse and avoids being held responsible for it.
Use of children
Some abusive acts are directed against or involve children in order to control or punish the
adult victim (e.g., physical attacks against a child, sexual use of children, forcing children to
watch the abuse of the victim, engaging children in the abuse of the victim). A perpetrator
may use children to maintain control over his partner by not paying child support,
threatening to take children away from her, involving her in long legal fights over custody, or
kidnapping or taking the children hostage as a way to force the victim’s compliance. Children
are also drawn into the assaults and are sometimes injured simply because they are present
(e.g., the victim is holding an infant when pushed against the wall) or because the child
attempts to intervene in the fight.
USE OF ECONOMICS
Perpetrators control victims by controlling their access to all of the family resources: time,
transportation, food, clothing, shelter, insurance, and money. He may actively resist the
victim becoming financially self-sufficient as a way to maintain power and control.
Conversely, he may refuse to work and insist that she support the family. He may expect her
to be the family “bookkeeper,” requiring that she keep all records and write all checks, or he
may keep financial information away from her. In all instances he alone makes the decisions.
Victims are put in the position of having to get “permission” to spend money on basic family
needs. When the victim leaves the battering relationship, the perpetrator may use economics
as a way to maintain control or force her to return: refusing to pay bills, instituting legal
procedures costly to the victim, destroying assets in which she has a share, or refusing to
work “on the books” where there would be legal access to his income. All of these tactics may
be used regardless of the economic class of the family.
The Health System Response to Gender-Based Violence in EECA: A programmatic package
4
Source: Ganley, Anne L.(1998): Understanding domestic violence. In: Warshaw, C., &
Ganley, A. (1998): Improving the health care response to domestic violence: a resource
manual for health care providers. Futures Without Violence: Health Care,
http://www.futureswithoutviolence.org/section/our_work/health/_health_ma…
Assignment 3: Qualitative Research
Assignment 3: Qualitative Research
Write a paper discussing the qualitative data collection and analysis you would recommend using to determine the price, placement, and promotion of a new health and energy beverage a company plans to add to its product line. In your paper do the following:
· Identify and describe at least three appropriate qualitative research tools.
· Explain the advantages and disadvantages of each of the qualitative research tools you selected.
· Discuss what you believe to be the top three ethical issues in qualitative research. Justify your choices.
· Choose the qualitative method(s) that you feel would be most appropriate for this project and explain the reasons for your selection of that method.
· Identify the steps and guidelines that should be used for effective implementation of the method(s) you selected.
Write a 4 page paper in Word format. Apply APA standards for writing style to your work. Utilize at least three scholarly resources in your response.
By 11/28/178PM PST, deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.
| Assignment Grading Criteria | Maximum Points |
| Identified and described at least three qualitative research tools. | 15 |
| Explained advantages and disadvantages of each of the selected qualitative research tools. | 20 |
| Described top 3 ethical issues and provided justification. | 15 |
| Chosen qualitative method is explained and justified. | 20 |
| Identified steps and guidelines for effective implementation. | 20 |
| Writing Craftsmanship, APA and Ethical Scholarship. | 10 |
| Total: |
Internet Profiling
How to properly use social media?
how to use social media and/other digital media means of communications and strategies?
how to extend knowledge to the public while actively engaging/involving them with the topic/project: Internet profiling
-how can we extend those resources to help create a better world/improve the world?
SEC 6040 – CASE PROJECT: LAW FIRM-Lincoln Partners, Esq.
CASE PROJECT: LAW FIRM
Points (1000)
Company: Law Firm: Lincoln Partners, Esq.
A law firm has hired you as a Network Security Consultant to help its operations by providing a secure network to support its growth. The Law firm currently has offices in Philadelphia, Cherry Hill, Wilmington, Harrisburg and Princeton. Its corporate office out of Philadelphia will provide all of its IT support.
Philadelphia Office is the main corporate office and consists of the following groups
Legal Group
Partners: There are 3 Attorneys that are the principals of the firm.
Associates: There are 10 Associates, attorneys, who work for the firm but do not share in the company profits, and therefore are not partners.
Paralegals: There are 15 Paralegals, who work on a part time basis to support the law firm
Office Manager: One manager who is responsible to support the office and she is responsible to ensure that everything runs smoothly, such as telephone, Fax, Copy, Supplies, Utilities, IT, etc. Also Manages the Cherry Hill Location.
IT Admin: He is responsible for maintaining all of the IT equipment: Internet Services, Telephone Services, Desktops, Servers, Routers and Switches, and Website. Also supports the Cherry Hill location.
Other Offices:
Associates: There are three associates, who help get new clients from other offices and their respective areas.
Paralegal: There is one paralegal to support the associates
IT Background Information
| Philadelphia | Other Offices | |
| Servers (Windows ) | 1 | 1 |
| Desktops | 20 | 4 |
| Network Printers / Copier / Fax | 1 | 0 |
| Desktop Printers | 5 – (Partners, Office Manager, IT Admin) | 4 |
| Laptops | 4 | 0 |
| Routers | 1 | 1 |
| Switches | 1 Main 2 Distributions | 1 |
| Website – Outsourced | Outsourced | |
| Email – | Outsourced |
Security Issues: What concerns the partners at this firm
1) Associates and paralegals taking clients / stealing business
2) Not having the ability to monitor business in remote locations
3) Reduce Costs in IT by consolidating
4) Privacy for their clients information
Task 1: Design a Secure Network using either Visio, Paint, Word, etc showing the All locations.
Task 2: Design and provide the IP Scheme for the network
Task 3: Establish a VPN between the All offices and allow the ability to work from home.
Task 4: Allow all employees the ability to access servers at the other locations
Task 5: Show and/or document all necessary security controls and its configuration.
Task 6: Update the firewalls to ensure security policy is enforced
Task 7: Show the DMZ on the diagram and placement of servers and Eliminate Outsourcing
Additionally, a new database (DB) system has been implemented in the Philadelphia office that is accessible by all locations. The DB holds client data that is confidential, and needs to be properly protected. The DB system also tracks attorney hours and allows the attorneys to charge the right customers. Many attorneys have been issued laptops and now have the ability to VPN from home.
CASE PROJECT REQUIRED SUBMISSIONS
FINAL SUBMISSION LIST
Please submit your assignment to show all of the requirements identified are properly accounted for.
Implementing a change plan to respond to the most significant pressures affecting Apple Inc.
In order for managers to respond effectively to environmental or organizational pressures that can be disruptive to an organization, they must implement clear intervention strategies. In a 1,000-1250 word paper, propose a change plan to respond to the most significant pressures affecting Apple Inc. Include the following:
1. Review the organizational/environmental pressures you presented in your initial paper: Determine which pressure is most important to address at this time in order to maintain a competitive and viable company. Summarize the pressure and how the organization is currently being affected. Project the outcome for the organization if it fails to address the pressure.
2. Develop a change vision to respond to the organizational or environmental pressure: The vision must define the organizational change and resonate with the decision making and strategies proposed in the paper. Additionally, the vison must include a cognitive and affective component in order to help stakeholders understand how to achieve the goals, and to inspire and motivate them to engage in the change.
3. Develop a change model to implement your change vision. Identify the specific steps needed to implement a change and effectively respond to the pressure. Describe a strategy for implementing each step.
4. Evaluate the potential resistance from stakeholders. Discuss the reasons for the resistance, at what point the resistance will likely occur, and some strategies for overcoming the resistance.
Prepare this assignment according to the guidelines found in the APA Style Guide. You are required to submit this assignment to Turnitin.
TWA Flight 800 Accident
Case Study Analysis
Activity Title:
Name:
Date:
Cause(s) of Accident
(Two to four paragraphs identifying the probable causes of the accident.)
Structural and Mechanical Factors
(Two to four paragraphs identifying the structural and mechanical factors involved in this accident.)
Contributing Factors
(Two to four paragraphs identifying what the contributing factors to the accident were.)
Investigation Board Findings
(Two to four paragraphs stating what the investigation board determined [not necessarily the U.S. NTSB].)
Recommendations
(Two to four paragraphs stating what the recommendations were from the investigation board.)
Outcomes
(Two to four paragraphs stating what happened AFTER the accident. Were any of the investigation board recommendations followed?)
References
(Provide your references following APA format.)
2
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
ECN 6215 APPLIED ECONOMETRICS
UNIVERSITY IN LONDON
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS
ECN 6215 APPLIED ECONOMETRICS
Assignment 2017
Submission date: Thursday 30th of November 2pm UK time Submission must be in word doc
The Assignment is 3500 words ∓ % All submission must be made online
This is individual work
Have look at London stock exchange index FTSE 250
(http://www.londonstockexchange.com/exchange/prices-and-
markets/stocks/indices/constituents-indices.html?index=UKX&industrySector=&page=1 ) or
FTSE 100 (http://www.londonstockexchange.com/exchange/prices-and-
markets/stocks/indices/constituents-indices.html?index=MCX&industrySector=&page=1 ).
You need to choose 10 firms from one index (FTSE 250 or FTSE 100) and from one of more
related sectors, such as bank and insurance, food and health and etc. Once you have chosen
your firms, you need to check where each firm has more than three years data, then download
daily closing prices for recent three years from yahoo finance
https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/quote/%5EFTMC/components?p=%5EFTMC or London stock
exchange website (http://www.londonstockexchange.com/home/homepage.htm ). You need
also to download monthly average risk free rate (Treasury bills – 3 month) from
(http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/boeapps/iadb/index.asp?Travel=NIxIRx&levels=1&XNote
s=Y&XNotes2=Y&Nodes=X4051X4052X4053X4058X3687X3764&SectionRequired=I&H
ideNums=-
1&ExtraInfo=true&A3765XBMX3687X3764.x=8&A3765XBMX3687X3764.y=3 ), and
either FTSE 100 or FTS 350 closing prices from London stock exchange website.
1- Calculate the daily return for your 10 firms and related index. Plot average and each firm returns against market return and comments on the shape, distribution and
correlation. Calculate the descriptive statistics and discuss the result.
(33.33 % of total marks)
2- Estimate the CAPM (Ei − r = βi (EM − r )), assuming the risk free rate is the same for all days over each month (assume the monthly rate as daily rate). Interpret
the result and comments on the reliability of the result by doing all diagnoses tests.
(33.33 % of total marks)
the properties of time series. This should be based on reasonable tests of time series of
return and stock prices regarding stationarity and forecasting based on your firms and
index.
(33.33 % of total marks)
Michael Porter's three generic strategies that firms can use to overcome the five forces and attain competitive advantage
Michael Porter presents three generic strategies that firms can use to overcome the five forces and attain competitive advantage. The first, overall cost leadership, is based on creating a low cost position relative to one’s peers. The second, differentiation, requires that the firm (or business unit) create products and/or services that are unique and valued. Finally, firms following a focus strategy must direct their attention (or “focus”) toward narrow product lines, buyer groups or geographical markets. Firms emphasizing a focus strategy must attain advantages either through differentiation or a cost leadership approach. Cost leadership requires a tight set of interrelated tactics such as: aggressive construction of efficient-scale facilities, vigorous pursuit of cost reductions from experience, tight cost and overhead control, avoidance of managerial customer accounts, and cost minimization in all activities in a firm’s value chain. Differentiation consists of creating differences in the firm’s products or service offerings by creating something that is perceived industry-wide as being unique and valued by customers. Differentiation can take many forms such as: prestige or brand image, technology, innovation, features, customer service, or dealer networks. The third generic strategy (focus) is based on the choice of a narrow competitive scope within an industry. Competitive advantages are attained by focusing on a segment or group of segments that tailors its strategy.
The key benefit to be enjoyed by firms that successfully integrate low cost and differentiation strategies is that it is generally harder for competitors to duplicate or imitate them. An integrated strategy enables a firm to provide two types of value to customers: differentiated attributes and lower prices. Furthermore, the benefits of combining advantages can be additive, instead of merely involving tradeoffs. To stay competitive, firms must update their strategies to reflect the new possibilities and constraints that the Internet and Web-based technologies represent. An overall low cost leadership strategy involves managing costs in every activity of a firm’s value chain and offering no-frills products that are an exceptional value at the best possible price. Internet technologies now provide more opportunities to manage costs and achieve greater efficiencies. But these capabilities are available to many firms and may provide only short-lived advantage. Most analysts agree that the Internet’s ability to lower transaction costs will transform business. Transaction costs refer to various expenses associated with conducting business. It applies not just to buy-sell transactions but to the costs of interacting with every part of a firm’s value chain, both within and outside the firm. The process of disintermediation lowers costs. Each time intermediaries are used in a transaction, additional costs are added. Removing those intermediaries lowers transaction costs. The Internet may also reduce the costs of traveling, and the cost of maintaining a physical address. Many experts agree that the net effect of the Internet is fewer rather than more opportunities for sustainable advantages. Therefore, new strategic combinations that make the best use of the competitive strategies may hold the greatest promise for future success. The Internet has provided all companies with greater tools for managing costs. This may be good in general for the efficiency of the economy. But for individual companies, it may shave profit margins and make creating a sustainable advantage more difficult. Many differentiation advantages are diminished by the Internet. The ability to comparatively shop, for example, is depriving some companies of unique advantages. In the Internet age, the best approach may be to combine differentiation with other competitive strategies. The greatest benefit may be in using the Internet to focus on a niche. However, an incumbent firm that previously thought a given niche market was not worth the effort may use Internet technologies to enter the segment for a lower cost than it could in the past.
Discuss the evolution of advertising in the digital age. What are the moral and ethical issues of modern advertising? How much do advertisers actually know about us and how do they get this information? How does being inundated with advertisements now more than ever before affect us mentally and emotionally? Are advertisers successfully manipulating us?
RESEARCH PAPER ASSIGNMENT
The research paper will count as 25% of your final grade. It should have a purposeful thesis (What point is your research arriving at? Why are the conclusions you are forming important? Your grade will be based equally on the strength of your paper’s composition and your engagement with the research process.
Requirements
· Your paper needs to contain at least at least six secondary sources including at least two print sources (eBooks count!) and no more than two academically verified internet sites.
· All sources, including internet sites, must be academically verified.
· Your final research paper needs to be at least 8-10 pages.
· At least six academic secondary sources need to be utilized in your final paper.
· You should have a clear argument that you engage with throughout your paper.
· Use of MLA format, including both in-text citations and a Works Cited page is
also required.
Research Paper Topics:
Modern Advertising
Discuss the evolution of advertising in the digital age. What are the moral and ethical issues of modern advertising? How much do advertisers actually know about us and how do they get this information? How does being inundated with advertisements now more than ever before affect us mentally and emotionally? Are advertisers successfully manipulating us?
