What types of recycling programs do you have on your campus and in your community?
What can be recycled on your campus?
Where can you recycle and is recycling convenient?
Does the recyclability of an item influence your consumer choices?
What are some ideas you have that could make your own campus less wasteful?
Post your answers to the Week 5 discussion, and respond to at least one other post.
Sample Solution
or human rights activists, UDHR is sacred, 30 articles that outline the political, economic, social rights that we are all entitled to, regardless of where and who we are, as we are all human. Making universality of human rights beyond question (though many still question), we all are free and equal after that point. It was the light at the end of a tunnel, a step forward in a world cripple by war, an attempt to ensure such events are never repeated on the face of the Earth, the acknowledgement by all states of the humanity of the people. Third generation: Collective-development In the newest generation of rights, the focus is broad and humanitarian. Things such as animal rights, environmental regulations, Indigenous peopleâs rights and more take the spotlight. While another focus is soft laws that work with communication rights, sustainability and economic and social development. The Question Now comes the question⦠How can one single document represent or claim to represent every person in the world, when our way of living are so different? For many, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is a biased document which fails (arguable) to account for the different cultural norms which exist in the world. To make matters worse, some see it as an attempt to impose Western values on the rest of the world. This is irrational, since there were representatives from South America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, these did not fit the notion of âWesternâ, nor do two-thirds of the endorsing votes. And now 193 countries have joined the United Nations, and abide by what Eleanor Roosevelt called the International Magna Carta. But what about the freedom of religion, was it really a Western imposition? The clause was supported by a number of Muslim representatives (whom I would expect the most resistance) from Pakistan to India. The most notable Muslim country that opposed was Saudi Arabia, who objected, and even abstained from voting on t>
or human rights activists, UDHR is sacred, 30 articles that outline the political, economic, social rights that we are all entitled to, regardless of where and who we are, as we are all human. Making universality of human rights beyond question (though many still question), we all are free and equal after that point. It was the light at the end of a tunnel, a step forward in a world cripple by war, an attempt to ensure such events are never repeated on the face of the Earth, the acknowledgement by all states of the humanity of the people. Third generation: Collective-development In the newest generation of rights, the focus is broad and humanitarian. Things such as animal rights, environmental regulations, Indigenous peopleâs rights and more take the spotlight. While another focus is soft laws that work with communication rights, sustainability and economic and social development. The Question Now comes the question⦠How can one single document represent or claim to represent every person in the world, when our way of living are so different? For many, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is a biased document which fails (arguable) to account for the different cultural norms which exist in the world. To make matters worse, some see it as an attempt to impose Western values on the rest of the world. This is irrational, since there were representatives from South America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, these did not fit the notion of âWesternâ, nor do two-thirds of the endorsing votes. And now 193 countries have joined the United Nations, and abide by what Eleanor Roosevelt called the International Magna Carta. But what about the freedom of religion, was it really a Western imposition? The clause was supported by a number of Muslim representatives (whom I would expect the most resistance) from Pakistan to India. The most notable Muslim country that opposed was Saudi Arabia, who objected, and even abstained from voting on t>