• All options are available with or without equipment • Available introductory materials (referral chapter, paragraph model,
• Status of the legislative internship at the Indiana State Senate in Spring 2011 • Election of President of Indianapolis Model Federation 2011 - 2012 Mid-Western Model EU Co-Director - Assistant to the Indiana University 2011 Department of Politics Assistant • Mentoring Olympic Central Park Official championships before the official game at the marathon • Olympic athletes coordinate the media relations of Indianapolis National Fitness and Sports Association of Indiana State 10/11 Report Volunteer Program Coordinator and Fitness Specialist • Nutritional Goal Research and 8-15 Young People Develop fitness activities - promote the growth of young people by participating in sports and organizing activities
The spring of 2011 was an era of confusion. This is an era of democracy. This is the moment of revolution. Arab Spring has finished Libya, Colonel Gaddafi, the most interesting contemporary empire of the day. Libya's state leader is the dictator of the name Muammar Gaddafi, and at last his crowd despises him. However, this is not necessarily the case. Gaddafi was the great leader of his power and early empire, helped the country, loved by the people of Libya. To fully understand the rise of the Libyan empire, it is necessary to understand the cultural and demographic data of Libya himself. Libya is the size of a large country, Alaska, located in North Africa. Despite its size, the population is sparse and has a population of only 5 million people, most of which are concentrated in coastal areas of Tripolitania, Sileenica, Fezan, but the lower part of the country is mainly the Sahara desert.
Libyan Arab Spring began to focus on the 2011 Libya civil war. This was a constant armed clash between the then leader Muammar Gaddafi and the people who were faithful to his regime and those who tried to defeat him. Grievances to regulators, lack of transparency, human rights violations, economic recession, especially the rise in the unemployment rate of educated young people highlight Libya's longstanding unemployment problem. Although it is difficult to obtain the official unemployment rate in Libya, the unemployment rate in 2009 is 20.74%, and the unemployment rate under the age of 20 is estimated to be over 50%. It is foreseeable that the Arab Spring faced instability and worsened the unemployment rate. After the collapse of the Gaddafi regime and the subsequent transfer of control under opposed forces, a decline in capital investment and flight of human capital