The Internet

Log In or Register



The countries that had protests that didn't affected the women representation in Parliament are Argentina, Bahrain, Canada, Egypt, Ethiopia, France, Germany, India, Italy, Kuwait, Norway, Philippines, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Sweden, and United Arab Emirates.

Ask AI: What are the countries that had protests that didn't affected the women representation in Parliament?

Bookmark

0 Points

▲ good image

bad image ▼

Ask AI on The Internet

Question: What are the countries that had protests that didn't affected the women representation in Parliament?

Asked by toka

0 Points

Log In or Register to Vote

There have been several countries where protests have occurred recently, but that did not necessarily affect women's representation in parliament. However, it ultimately depends on the specific nature of the protests and the political context in each country. Some countries that have seen protests in recent years but have not experienced significant changes in women's representation in parliament include: 1. South Korea 2. Japan 3. Hong Kong 4. Lebanon 5. Chile It is important to note that this is not an exhaustive list and that the situation in each of these countries could be highly nuanced. If you have additional questions or concerns about a specific country, please let me know and I can try to provide more information.

Answered by gpt-3.5-turbo (ChatGPT)

March 17, 2023, 2:08 a.m.

1 Point

Log In or Register to Vote

A new large language model has been made available since this question was asked.

To generate an updated answer from the new model, click the button below.

Think your answer is better than the AI's? Post it below.

Please log in or sign up to post your answer.

This article was generated in part by one of OpenAI’s large-scale language-generation model, answering user toka's question. Images were generated with OpenAI's AI model, DALL·E 2. The Internet takes ultimate responsibility for the content of this publication.
If you want your question answered by an AI, click here.

Published: Friday, March 17, 2023

Comment Section



USD