Cruise School,: 2 Semester Social Studies For 8 Handouts
Cruise School,: 2 Semester Social Studies For 8 Handouts
Cruise School,: 2 Semester Social Studies For 8 Handouts
During the period of 1984 - 1994, the population of Ethiopia grew at the rate of
2.9% year.
In ten years, the population grew by 13.4million.
What is the difference between fertility rate and mortality rate?
The three importance determinants of population change are;
1) Fertility Rate
2) Mortality rate and
3) Migration
1. Fertility rate: is the average number of children that would be born alive to women
during her fertility time.
The total fertility rate in Ethiopia is one of the highest in the world.
The pattern of fertility in Ethiopia varies between urban and rural areas.
It also varies from region to region.
The most important strategy to counter rapid population growth in Ethiopia are
indicated in the national population policy. Some of them are:
Due to land degradation drought in Ethiopia has been intensified drought results
drying out of the crop before harvest, loss of human and livestock lives.
We must conserve, protect and property utilize our natural resources. This is the
responsible of every member of the society in general and the youth in particular.
It usually applies only to acts that would be termed criminal (if performed
by an adult).
A young person carries out a criminal behavior; such young persons are
called juveniles.
The legal age at which a person is considered a juvenile varies from place to place.
Many countries define anyone less than 18 years of age as a juvenile. Others
consider anyone under 17 a juvenile. For some, juveniles may be those under the
age of 16.
In Ethiopia, the age group under 18 years old is considered as juvenile.
In Ethiopia, juvenile offenders are said to engage in a variety of offenses. Some of
the offenses committed by delinquents include:
Fighting, rape and abduction, theft, murder, abuse of drugs, gambling,
burning down houses and property, assault, cheating and making attacks in
groups.
Not all offenses are committed equally. Some offenses such as theft, rape and
robbery are the main type of offenses committed by juvenile delinquents
Causes Delinquency
Most of these have focused on family relationships or on neighborhood or
community conditions. The following are the major cause of delinquency:-
Have unhappy home life
Family relationships between parents and individual children
Unhappy home lives and felt discontented with their life circumstances
Have grown improperly
Have grown in drunken family
Have grown in their parent’s inconsistent patterns of discipline and punishment
Have grown in families who are unable to provide affection or love or financial
support for their children
Have been identified as a potential delinquent
Have a family that is involved in crime
Attention to youths neglected by their parents.
Avoiding Delinquency
The following programs should take as a measure to solve or avoid delinquent
acts in a society:
Providing counseling services to youths who appear to be on the verge becoming
delinquency
bring youngsters into clubs and recreational centers
improving the educational and work skills of youngsters
Using an effective parenting system
Creating intimacy with children
Avoiding abuse and violence on children
Member states are to give every assistance to the UN and refrain from giving
assistance to those at war;
The United Nations is not to intervene in matters within the jurisdiction of
member states.
The headquarters of the UN is in New York, USA.
The UN has the following organs:
1. The General Assembly
2. The Security Council
3. The Secretariat
4. The Economic and Social Council
5. The Trusteeship Council
6. The International Court of Justice
1. The General Assembly
The General Assembly is composed of all member states.
Each member state has one vote in the Assembly.
The General Assembly elects the non-permanent members to the Security
Council and the members of other councils and committees.
2. The Security Council
The Security Council is the leading organ of the UN.
It has the primary responsibility of maintaining international peace and security.
It has five permanent members: Britain, Russia, USA, France and China (since
1971).
The permanent members have the right of veto. This means decisions will not be
passed if any of the permanent members opposes it.
The number of non-permanent members was 6, later it grew to 10, and then 15.
The non-permanent members are elected every two years.
Initially the following agencies work directly under the Security Council.
The Military Staff Committee advises the Council regarding the use of
military force to preserve international peace.
The Disarmament Commission draws up plans for the regulation and
reduction of conventional armaments and for the elimination of nuclear
weapons.
The Security Council controls the election of the Secretary General of
the United Nations and the admission of new members to the
organization.
It has also the power to send commissions to investigate problems in areas
of conflicts or crisis.
3. The Secretariat
The Secretariat consists of the Secretary General with a staff of 15,000
The head office is in New York while the other UN organs are located
in Geneva Switzerland and Vienna, Austria
The main duties of the Secretariat are:
To implement the decisions of the General Assembly and the Councils;
To bring issues of major concern to the attention of the General Assembly;
To draw up an annual report of the organizations, and
To coordinate the activities and direct funds for the many specialized agencies.
The Secretary General is appointed by the General Assembly on the
recommendation of the Security Council for a period of five years.
UN Secretary Generals
Name Nationality Service Year
TrygveLie Norway 1946-1953
The specialized agencies coordinate their efforts with the UN through the
Economic and Social Council.
UNESCO has established an International Institute for Capacity Building in
Addis Ababa (ICBA).
5. The Trusteeship Council
After the end of the Second World War in 1945, the colonies of defeated
Italy and Japan together with the already existing mandates were placed
under the United Nations supervision as trust territories.
Countries administering trust territories promised to prepare the native
peoples for self-government and to accept the supervision of the UN
Trusteeship Council.
The Trusteeship Council consisted of an equal number of nations
administering trust territories and nations not administering trust
territories.
Decision required a simple majority.
This organ has completed its function and officially suspended because of
the independence of all countries of the world.
6. The International Court of Justice
The International Court of Justice consists of 15 judges elected by the
General Assembly.
The judges are chosen based on their qualifications and not on their
nationality or citizenship. However, no two judges can be from the same
country.
The seat of the Court is in The Hague, Netherlands. Judges decide cases
by majority vote.
The Court has the power to settle legal disputes between nations. The court
also provides the UN organs advisory services on legal questions.
Nations submitting disputes to the court agree in advance to accept the
decision of the Court.
4.5. Globalization
Globalization: - refers to the increasing interconnections among
individuals across nations and their people.
It refers to a remarkable exchange and sharing of information, culture, economic
resources and technology, which leads to strong interdependence among peoples of
different nations of the world.
A. Economic Globalization
There are a number of institutions that promote and are themselves reflections of
globalization
Some of the examples are the international financial institutions like:
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (the World
Bank)
These organizations facilitate the development of common economic policies
among many countries in the world.
Globalization also refers to the reduction and removal of barriers between
national borders in order to facilitate the flow of goods, capital, services and
labour.
For the last fifty years, barriers to international trade have been lowered through
international agreements like the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT).
Today around 35,000 MNCs operate in the world. About 80 percent of the world
trade passes through the hands of these MNCs.
B. Cultural Globalization
The cultural dimension of globalization is seen in the presence of Western
entertainment and mass media.
This was understood at first as the global domination of Western (American)
culture. It was seen as a "Cultural invasion" made at the expense of local
identities.