Exam 2: Globalization and Urbanization in the More-Developed World
Exam 1: Why Study the City23 Questions
Exam 2: Globalization and Urbanization in the More-Developed World23 Questions
Exam 3: Globalization and Urbanization in the Less-Developed World23 Questions
Exam 4: The City in Everyday Life22 Questions
Exam 5: Community in the Modern World23 Questions
Exam 6: The Community in the Postmodern Era23 Questions
Exam 7: Reading the City23 Questions
Exam 8: Choosing a Place to Live23 Questions
Exam 9: A Home-Buying Primer: When Theory Meets the Road23 Questions
Exam 10: The Suburbanization Process23 Questions
Exam 11: The Segregation and Location of Groups in Cities23 Questions
Exam 12: Urban Problems in the Global Era23 Questions
Exam 13: Urban Planning in the Twenty-First Century23 Questions
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The text observes that culture is to society as DNA is to our bodies.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
True
Which of the following is NOT one of the qualities that Thomas Friedman and Robert Reich think will make America succeed?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
Robert Reich focuses on three groups that make up 85 percent of the American workforce. Which of the following is NOT one of these?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
C
By 2020, the top fifth of American earners will account for less than 50 percent of all income earned by Americans.
(True/False)
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Between 1992 and 2000, the United States experienced unprecedented economic recession with extremely high inflation.
(True/False)
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Thomas Friedman argues that all societies in the world have two wants, represented by the olive tree and
(Multiple Choice)
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Adjoining newer cities are sometimes called __________ cities.
(Multiple Choice)
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The gross __________ product is a measure of the total output of goods and services by a nation's economy.
(Multiple Choice)
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According to Thomas Friedman, four profound independent social and technological changes converged in the 1980s to make the globalization of the world economy possible. Which of the following is NOT one of these?
(Multiple Choice)
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Robert Kaplan shows that symbolic analysts prefer self-contained engineered communities, rich in services and removed from the problems of society. He calls these new, insulated communities urban
(Multiple Choice)
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The text points out that the events of September 11, 2001 happened in a vacuum.
(True/False)
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The major reason for the disparity in the growth of the working poor in this and
other industrial societies is a lack of education.
(True/False)
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Based on the work of Robert B. Reich, describe the shift from high-volume to high-value manufacturing, the rise of the global corporation, and the rise of the symbolic analyst.
(Essay)
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List the four profound, independent social and technological changes described by Friedman that combined during the 1980s to make the globalization of the world economy possible. Give an example of each change.
(Essay)
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Robert Reich focuses on three groups that make up 85 percent of the American workforce. Name each of these groups and give a practical example.
(Short Answer)
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The __________ Act of 2002 is the most far-reaching series of changes to the laws of corporate governance, disclosure, and accounting oversight since the federal securities laws were enacted seventy years ago.
(Multiple Choice)
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Social scientists coined the term __________ to describe the sprawling metropolises like Vancouver, Seattle, and Portland at the core of regional economies like Cascadia.
(Multiple Choice)
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When __________ published The Work of Nations, he was a political economist at Harvard at the time.
(Multiple Choice)
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The future of each of Robert Reich's workforce groups is determined by three factors. Which of the following is NOT one of these?
(Multiple Choice)
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The technology that makes it possible to manage markets worldwide also permits individuals to do unimaginable harm. Thomas Friedman refers to these individuals as
(Multiple Choice)
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