Sweden's prison population has dropped so dramatically that the country plans to close four of its prisons. What lessons can the UK learn?"
How does Sweden's prisoner percentage of population compare to the US?
Tenshinai wrote:Howard T. Map-addict wrote:You're welcome.
Once they get there, several things might happen.
Some of them stay. Some move on. Some go back.
EU/Europe = important question.
In the sense of nation-state, very dubiously.
In the old-fashioned sense of "people sharing the same
culture, or very similar cultures,
then IMHO yes, very likely, in many ways.
Once upon a time, that "nation" was called Christiandom.
Its political expression was called "Roman Empire."
Cities as far away as Moscow claimed to be "3rd Rome."
Of course, mine is the "expansive" or "liberal" view.
Other's miliage varies.
HTM
*ugh*
Sharing the same culture? Across EUROPE?![]()
Goodness no. I have more in common with someone from New York, California or even Texas than i have with someone from France or Italy, much less Romania, Spain or Italy.
And people can often still see the difference between people from nations as similar as Sweden and Norway.Is the US One Nation or Many?
I would say the answer to this question is BOTH.
There is a strong and clear national pseudo-unity(people agree very strongly that they agree about being part of USA, even if they all tend to claim that they agree about different things), under which strong regionalisation can be found(often including many of the above differences).His most mistaken argument is "isolation of regions."
Actually, people have *always* been moving between
regions, exchanging ideas with other people.
Yes, but the areas are so big that most movements still go within them.
You can find strong regionalisation even in different parts of a small nation like Belgium, TODAY, and USA has had a few centuries of digging in, as it´s isolationism extends to regions as well as nationally, more in some areas and less in others, but that also means a reduced amount of exchange.
And of course, just because people move doesn´t mean that they change something where they move to.