Social Sciences, asked by Thowfeeq8524, 1 year ago

Biographies of social reformers who strived to eradicate untouchability

Answers

Answered by writersparadise
2
Untouchability is a practice where a group of people were ostracized and segregated from the rest of the community due to social customs. The excluded group of people were called as Untouchables.

Many people tried to abolish the untouchability system during the fight for an independent India. However, the contribution of Mahatma Gandhi and Dr. B.R. Ambedkar remains on top than all the others.

The biography of Dr. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar can be found at the link:

http://www.culturalindia.net/reformers/br-ambedkar.html

The biography of Mahatma Gandhi can be found at the link:

https://www.biography.com/people/mahatma-gandhi-9305898

Answered by thakuruttamsing10
6

Explanation:

  1. Social work pioneer Jane Addams was one of the first women to receive a Nobel Peace Prize, which was awarded in 1931. Known best for establishing settlement houses in Chicago for immigrants in the early 1900s, Addams was a dedicated community organizer and peace activist.

  1. Social work pioneer Jane Addams was one of the first women to receive a Nobel Peace Prize, which was awarded in 1931. Known best for establishing settlement houses in Chicago for immigrants in the early 1900s, Addams was a dedicated community organizer and peace activist.Frances Perkins , a social worker, was the first woman to be appointed to the cabinet of a U.S. President. As President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Secretary of Labor, Perkins drafted much of the New Deal legislation in the 1940s.

  1. Social work pioneer Jane Addams was one of the first women to receive a Nobel Peace Prize, which was awarded in 1931. Known best for establishing settlement houses in Chicago for immigrants in the early 1900s, Addams was a dedicated community organizer and peace activist.Frances Perkins , a social worker, was the first woman to be appointed to the cabinet of a U.S. President. As President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Secretary of Labor, Perkins drafted much of the New Deal legislation in the 1940s.Social worker and civil rights trailblazer Whitney M. Young, Jr. became the executive director of the National Urban League while serving as dean for the Atlanta School of Social Work. He also served as president of NASW in the late 1960s. A noted expert in American race relations, Time Magazine acknowledged Young as a key inspiration for President Johnson’s War on Poverty.
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