The American regime imposed the English language as the lingua franca in the islands through free public education.
The Monroe Doctrine covered the Western Hemisphere. At the time, Great Britain applauded this doctrine in that it then considered its North American holdings, such as Canada, safe. Violations did occur however and were treated not specifically to be Monroe Doctrine ones. By this I mean the installation of a French puppet regime in Mexico. After the US Civil War, assembling US troops on the Mexican border, and threatening to invade Mexico was enough for France to abandon this idea. Regardless of the Doctrine, the US used its military to protect its own national security.
The archipelago doctrine defines and elucidates the archipelago as a body of water studded with islands and the outermost portion of the archipelago are connected with straight baselines and consider all waters covered therein as internal waters thereof.
There is no such doctrine. Perhaps you're looking for the Monroe Doctrine.
France
An archipelago is a group of islands. Archipelago doctrines operate by including all islands and water surrounding the islands under the exclusive sovereignty of the mother land.
I need an answer fast.......... the German system seems to be the peg
The archipelago doctrine is based on the idea that a group of islands forms a single integrated unit over which a state can assert sovereignty, even if the islands are not geographically contiguous. This doctrine is often used to determine a country's maritime boundaries and exclusive economic zones in cases where the country consists of multiple islands spread over a wide area.
Invaded the Falkland Islands
A dissident, broadly defined, is a person who actively challenges an established doctrine, policy, or institution.
The American regime imposed the English language as the lingua franca in the islands through free public education.
The Doctrine of Nullification held that states had the right to declare null and void any federal law they deem unconstitutional.
Uniformitarianism
Uniformitarianism
The Archipelago Doctrine is a part of the Filipino Constitution of 1973. Fundamentally, its provision means that all of the Philippine islands and territories should be considered as one area for the purpose of history and law.
Hiran W. Jayewardene has written: 'The regime of islands in international law' -- subject(s): Islands, Law and legislation 'The Human rights situation in Sri Lanka'
Uniformitarianism