Assignment 2 I have the work but some parts have plag

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remove plagiarism in my 2 pages. I have only 3 hours but it easy work so do in 1 hours. I also need good grammar when editing

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Running Head: SWITZERLAND 1 SWITZERLAND Student Name Institution of Affiliation SWITZERLAND 2 Switzerland is landlocked country of towering mountains, deep Alpine lakes, grassy valleys dotted with neat farms and small villages, and thriving cities that blend the old and the new, Switzerland is the nexus of the diverse physical and cultural geography of Western Europe, renowned for both its natural beauty and its way of life. Aspects of both have become bywords for the country, whose very name conjures images of the glacier-carved Alps beloved of writers, artists, photographers, and outdoor sports enthusiasts from around the world. Switzerland also evokes a prosperous if rather staid and unexciting society, an image that is now dated. Switzerland remains wealthy and orderly, but its mountain-walled valleys are far more likely to echo the music of a local rock band than a yodel or an alphorn. Most Swiss live in towns and cities, not in the idyllic rural landscapes that captivated the world through Johanna Spyri’s Heidi (1880–81), the country’s best-known literary work. Switzerland’s cities have emerged as international centers of industry and commerce connected to the larger world, a very different tenor from Switzerland’s isolated, more inward-looking past. As a consequence of its remarkably long-lived stability and carefully guarded neutrality, Switzerland—Geneva, in particular—has been selected as headquarters for a wide array of governmental and nongovernmental organizations, including many associated with the United Nations (UN)—an organization the Swiss resisted joining until the early 21st century (2018). Switzerland’s rugged topography and multicultural milieu have tended to emphasize difference. People living in close proximity may speak markedly distinct, sometimes nearly mutually unintelligible dialects of their first language, if not a different language altogether. German, French, Italian, and Romansh all enjoy national status, and English is spoken widely. Invisible lines separate historically Protestant from historically Roman Catholic districts, while SWITZERLAND 3 the tall mountains of the Saint Gotthard Pass separate northern from southern Europe and their diverse sensibilities and habits. Yet, Switzerland has forged strength from all these differences, creating a peaceful society in which individual rights are carefully balanced against community and national interests. Switzerland has enjoyed relative domestic tranquility since the mid-19th century, and its organization has remained essentially the same: it is a union of more than 3,000 communes, or municipalities, situated in 26 cantons, 6 of which are traditionally referred to as demi cantons (half cantons) but function as full cantons. Ordinary citizens are able to participate at every level of politics and regularly exercise their will in referenda and initiatives, through which Swiss citizens directly make numerous policy decisions at the national and subnational level. Two effects of this popular involvement are evident: Swiss taxes are rather low by European standards, because voters are able to review and approve a broad range of expenditures, and political decision making tends to be slow, because contending individual claims and opinions must be allowed to be expressed at every step. That high level of citizen involvement prompted the renowned 20th-century Swiss playwright and ironist Friedrich Dürrenmatt to allegorize Switzerland as a prison in which each Swiss citizen was at the same time prisoner and guard. Even so, the Swiss blend of federalism and direct democracy is unique in the world and is considered central to the country’s political and economic success. And Switzerland is indeed a major economic power, thanks to its long tradition of financial services and high-quality, specialized manufactures of items such as precision timepieces, optics, chemicals, and pharmaceuticals, as well as of specialty foodstuffs SWITZERLAND 4 such as Emendable cheese and milk chocolate. Switzerland is regularly judged to have among the world’s highest standards of living (2018). A metropolis extending along a large lake where the mountains meet the plains, Zürich is by far the country’s largest and most cosmopolitan city, its famed Bahnhofstrasse rivaling shopping districts found in other leading cities in the world. Basel and Lucerne are major German-speaking cities, Geneva and Lausanne the centers of the country’s French-speaking cantons, and Bellinzona and Lugano the principal cities in the Italian-speaking Ticino. Switzerland has long been a model multiethnic, multilingual society, a place in which diverse peoples can live in social harmony and unite in common interest. The Swiss justifiably take great pride in this, and the point was encapsulated in the early 21st century by Ruth Dreifuss, who in 1999 became the country’s first woman and first Jewish president (a post that rotates annually): SWITZERLAND 5 References EBook(2018).
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Hello again! 😄 Here you have the file, I checked it with the plagiarism checker of studypool and the result was 0%. If you need something else, write me 😋

SWITZERLAND
Student Name
Institution of Affiliation

Switzerland is a country that remembers a prosperous and fortunate society,
although also a formal one, being little stimulating for its population; this being an image
that is currently outdated and little anchored in reality. Although Switzerland does not
have coasts, it has immense alpine lakes, as well as long valleys where small towns and
big cities settle. The old and the new are mixed in a unique combination, highlighting
then the natural beauty of its landscapes and the way of life of its inhabitants. This has
been portrayed in world culture, by writers, photographers and other artists who seek to
characterize the essence of the Swiss Alps.
Although the landscape is a natural barrier between its people and the rest of the
world, cities have become, over the years, industrial and commercial centers that connect
with the world. This contrasts sharply with his past, much more isolated from the rest of
Europe, but that is undoubtedly a consequence of long-standing economic stability, social
and cultural policy, as well as the neutrality adopted when dealing with international
conflicts. It is this last aspect that stands out to host a large number of governmental and
non-governmental organizations (2018).
The landscape of Switzerland has had a marked influence on cultural differences,
not only with the rest of the world but also among its inhabitants, that is even when it is
a relatively close town, it is common to meet people who speak markedly differently. In
fact, throughout the country, you can easily hear Italian, German, French, and English,

which is also an expression of the openness that is currently the country with the rest of
the world. There are also invisible lines that separate the people characterized as being
Protestants from those who historically have been Catholics.
Despite these marked cultural differences, Switzerland has enjoyed relative
political peace since the nineteenth century, maintaining a constant geopolitical
organization over ti...


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