Deck 9: Poverty, Development, and Hunger

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Question
In developing countries, poverty and hunger disproportionally affect

A) women and children.
B) infants.
C) economic growth.
D) spending at globalized chains such as McDonald's and Starbucks.
Use Space or
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to flip the card.
Question
The mainstream approach to hunger states that there is enough food, but that the problems are _______ and/or _______.

A) fertilizer supplies; seeds for crops
B) distribution networks; entitlement
C) inadequate rainfall; distribution networks
D) inadequate rainfall; seeds for crops
Question
A critical alternative view of poverty places more emphasis the availability of

A) common resources.
B) an efficient food supply.
C) genetically modified foods.
D) family planning resources.
Question
According to the text, the state with the largest proportion of the population infected with COVID-19 is

A) India.
B) Germany.
C) the United States.
D) Brazil.
Question
According to the text, while food production has increased,

A) the number of people who go hungry has been all but eliminated.
B) food production technology has declined.
C) little impact has been made on the number of people who go hungry.
D) cash crop production has been abolished.
Question
At base, the mainstream concept of poverty translates to

A) sufficient hard currency but insufficient purchasing power.
B) an almost Calvinist self-betterment.
C) an abundance of liquidity.
D) unfulfilled material needs.
Question
Which approach to poverty, development, and hunger argues that development follows a linear path from "traditional" to "modern"?

A) Embedded liberalism
B) Mainstream
C) Critical alternative
D) Post-positivist
Question
What organization has made the distinction between income poverty (a material condition) and human poverty (encompassing human dignity, agency, opportunity, and choices)?

A) UNICEF
B) Oxfam
C) United Nations Development Programme
D) World Bank
Question
World Bank data show that the number of people living on less than $1.25 a day was reduced from _______ in 1990 to _______ in 2015.

A) 836 million; 500 million
B) 1.9 billion; 836 million
C) 3 billion; 1.37 billion
D) 5 billion; 3 billion
Question
What term refers to an international economic order based on the pursuit of free trade, but allowing an appropriate role for state intervention in the market in support of national security and national and global stability?

A) Embedded liberalism
B) Neoliberalism
C) Mercantilism
D) Global capitalism
Question
What view of development argues for a process that is bottom up, participatory, and reliant on appropriate (often local) knowledge and technology, with small investments in small-scale projects and a protection of the commons?

A) Orthodox
B) Alternative
C) World systems
D) Liberal
Question
The process of development in the orthodox model is generally seen as a(n) _______ approach.

A) bottom-up
B) community-driven
C) obsolete
D) top-down
Question
A UN Development Program report on the 1990s stated that no fewer than _______ developing or "in transition" countries had experienced serious economic decline over the previous three decades.

A) 21
B) 33
C) 67
D) 100
Question
"Diverse paths, locally driven" is a component of which approach of development?

A) Mercantilist
B) Critical alternative
C) Ethno-centrist
D) Liberal institutionalist
Question
China, Sri Lanka, Poland, and Cuba _______ under HDI measures than under _______ modes of measurement.

A) score lower; alternative
B) perform the same; unorthodox
C) score higher; orthodox
D) score lower; orthodox
Question
Time-limited, quantifiable targets across eight areas, including poverty, health, gender, education, environment, and development are known as

A) Development for a Better World.
B) Global Development Now.
C) Millennium Development Goals.
D) Building Tomorrow Today.
Question
Applying neoliberal economic policies that favor a minimalist state and an enhanced role for the market was the focus of the

A) Beltway Agreement.
B) Washington Consensus.
C) Millennial Development Goals.
D) Sustainable Development Goals.
Question
Modernization theory views development as synonymous with

A) increased per capita caloric intake.
B) higher per capita GDP.
C) poverty reduction.
D) economic growth.
Question
Economic growth, according to modernization theory, is required to reduce

A) poverty.
B) hunger.
C) environmental damage.
D) conflict.
Question
According to modernization theory, countries with lower per capita income are regarded as

A) pastoral.
B) impoverished.
C) less developed.
D) uncivilized.
Question
In the 1960s and 1970s, _______ stressed how the periphery, or Global South, was actively underdeveloped by policies and decisions that promoted the growth in wealth of the core Western countries and of elites in the periphery.

A) structural realist theorists
B) dependency theorists
C) advocates of the Washington Consensus
D) neoliberals
Question
The orthodox and alternative evaluations of the causes of poverty are based on _______ and they are _______.

A) IMF planning documents; therefore, based on sound statistical evidence
B) Marxist thinking; outmoded with the end of the Cold War
C) GATT data sets; in need of revision by UNCTAD and the G-77
D) different values; measuring different things
Question
What regime or institution promotes economic growth through trade liberalization coupled with pro-poor growth and poverty reduction policies?

A) Neoliberalism
B) Post-Washington Consensus
C) Lomé Convention
D) Washington Consensus
Question
What term describes the idea that development must meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs?

A) Efficient intertemporal resource allocation
B) Sustainable development
C) Generational development
D) Ecological development
Question
The UN's Brundtland Commission proposed which of the following?

A) Efficient intertemporal resource allocation
B) Sustainable development
C) Generational development
D) Ecological development
Question
Which country is considered a "new globalizer"?

A) Germany
B) Afghanistan
C) Mexico
D) Canada
Question
Grassroots movements play an important role in challenging entrenched structures of power in

A) transnational corporations.
B) the Global South.
C) states participating in NAFTA and the USMCA.
D) democratic societies.
Question
In 1994, the World Bank came up with its "Operational Policy 4.20," which concerns

A) gender disparities.
B) drug policy.
C) institutional restructuring.
D) sustainable development.
Question
It is estimated that _______ people around the world did not have enough food in 2015.

A) 100 million
B) 250 million
C) 815 million
D) 2.5 billion
Question
Cash crop production in the developing world is increasingly replacing

A) transnational corporate profits.
B) the developed world.
C) the international system.
D) local subsistence food production.
Question
Which writer first proposed a relationship between human population growth and the food supply?

A) Guillermo O'Donnell
B) Thomas Malthus
C) John Watson
D) Adam Smith
Question
According to the text, when the human population goes beyond the Earth's _______, disaster is inevitable.

A) efficient intertemporal resource location
B) regeneration rate
C) sustainable threshold
D) carrying capacity
Question
Amartya Sen, in Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation, concludes that hunger is not due to there not being enough to eat; rather, it is because of

A) war.
B) people not having enough to eat.
C) climate change.
D) the slow regeneration rate of resources.
Question
The global human population has _______ since the 1800s.

A) stayed the same
B) doubled
C) tripled
D) quintupled
Question
According to the text, the factor that determines whether a person experiences chronic hunger is not the availability of food but the ability to

A) grow food safely.
B) establish an entitlement to food.
C) produce food.
D) store food for long enough periods of time.
Question
According to Sen, those least able to procure food entitlements are

A) rural farmers.
B) urban factory workers.
C) landless laborers and pastoralists.
D) the elderly.
Question
A food system based upon entitlements causes those who lack the _______ to procure food to go hungry.

A) purchasing power
B) ingenuity
C) knowledge
D) military power
Question
In developing countries there is/are generally no _______ to ensure people are able to obtain food.

A) food distribution system
B) social security arrangements
C) adequate transportation
D) economic growth
Question
Which type of actor has the largest role in the global food regime?

A) Local communities
B) Indigenous peoples
C) Transnational corporations
D) IGOs
Question
What state/organization has been the most active in the creation of the global food regime?

A) The United Nations
B) China
C) The European Union
D) The United States
Question
The domestic production of food staples in developing countries, combined with changes in consumer preferences in importing countries and the creation of export markets, led to

A) dependence on food aid in the developing world.
B) a global decrease in food production.
C) a rise in subsistence farming.
D) food independence in the developing world.
Question
A stress on _______ production has led towards export-oriented, large-scale, intensively mechanized agriculture in the Global South.

A) GMO crop
B) local
C) cash crop
D) subsistence
Question
According to the text, what was an adverse effect of the "Green Revolution"?

A) Too much food caused medical problems associated with overeating
B) Peasants were evicted from their land because their labor was no longer needed
C) The revolutionaries did not consider the long-term impacts of changing the political leadership
D) Stress for farmers because for the first time they had surplus crops that they needed to sell to pay for the "green" seeds
Question
What has helped erode local food security?

A) Agricultural trade liberalization
B) Abnormal climate conditions
C) Elongated crop rotation methods combined with the lack of spare tractor parts
D) Seasonal variations in the practices of transhumance
Question
The Group of 77 states are also referred to as

A) the trade union of the poor.
B) OPEC.
C) the global food cartel.
D) the liberal order states.
Question
Promotion of neoliberal economic policies has been accompanied by _______ inequality _______ states.

A) leveling off of; across all
B) elimination of; within all
C) decreasing; between
D) rising; within and among
Question
The various views on poverty agree on the basic material aspects, such as lack of food, clean water, and sanitation, but there is disagreement on the importance of _______ aspects.

A) economic
B) nonmaterial
C) development
D) governmental
Question
The mainstream or orthodox approach to poverty is based upon which of the following?

A) Per capita water supply
B) Food
C) Money
D) GDP growth
Question
According to the text, as globalization has intensified, poverty, defined in economic terms, has come to characterize significant sectors of populations in

A) both the developing countries of the Global South and in developed countries like the United States.
B) only in the Global South.
C) no region in particular as poverty is declining at such a fast rate.
D) the developed economies of the West, but no longer in the Global South.
Question
Human poverty encompasses which of the following elements?

A) Strictly material conditions
B) Basic survival of the human species
C) Human dignity
D) The lack of financial support for the global commons
Question
The 17 goals set forth by the UN Development Programme to improve quality of life around the world are collectively referred to as the

A) Millennial Development Goals (MDGs).
B) Life Improvement Goals (LIGs).
C) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
D) UN Goals (UNGs).
Question
During the Cold War the majority of third world (now Global South) countries were in the capitalist camp because of

A) former colonial ties.
B) the superior economic performance of the West.
C) a desire for continued closed relations with former colonial powers.
D) the irresistibility of Western values and norms.
Question
What catchphrase informed the strategies of the IMF and World Bank and, importantly, through the Uruguay Round of trade discussions carried out under the auspices of GATT?

A) Four More Years
B) Eight Is Enough
C) Growth the Pie
D) There Is No Alternative
Question
For proponents of neoliberal economic policies, inequality is not a negative aspect but an indicator of

A) the work ethic of less-well-off people.
B) an opportunity for competition and entrepreneurial spirit.
C) Keynesian economics.
D) "trickle-down" economics.
Question
Advocates of a critical alternative approach emphasize the pattern of distribution of gains within global society and within individual states, rather than

A) economic growth.
B) poverty eradication.
C) an increase in per capita caloric intake.
D) an egalitarian distribution of resources.
Question
According to dependency theorists, in the 1960s and 1970s growth in the core countries was achieved through the active underdevelopment of which region?

A) Africa
B) Latin America
C) Global South
D) East Asia
Question
The alternative approach to development and poverty reduction emphasizes the role of _______ in determining the process that is required.

A) the UN
B) NGOs
C) national governments
D) local communities
Question
The alternative approach to development places _______ over _______.

A) markets; growth
B) wealth generation; equity
C) diversity; universality
D) NGOs; people
Question
The North-South agenda has _______ in the years since the Rio Summit.

A) reached its goals
B) changed little
C) changed a great deal
D) not changed
Question
The Chiapas uprising attempted to

A) bring attention to the rapid decease in life expectancy among people living in Gondwanaland.
B) bring attention to the crisis of legitimacy caused by the IMF's SAP for Malta.
C) increase average local purchasing power in Guatemala.
D) bring attention to the needs of indigenous people in Mexico.
Question
What is the purpose of development from the critical alternative point of view?
Question
How does the alternative view envision poverty?
Question
What did the Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation say that the process of development should contain?
Question
Name three of the five points that the alternative approach argues should be the focus of the process of development.
Question
How does the Human Development Index (HDI) differ from earlier mainstream measures of poverty?
Question
What is the relationship between democracy and development?
Question
Have conditions in the developing world changed since the end of the Cold War? How so?
Question
Why have different meanings been attached to the term "poverty"?
Question
What is the relationship between economic liberalism and poverty?
Question
Was the Green Revolution successful?
Question
Explain Malthus's idea concerning the link between population growth and the food supply.
Question
Is local food security important in a globalized economy? Why or why not?
Question
How have organizations such as the UN, IMF, and so on helped or hindered reducing malnourishment around the globe?
Question
How is the US push for agricultural trade liberalization a net positive or a net negative for the Global South?
Question
Using the gendered lens, how does trade liberalization affect the peoples of sub-Saharan Africa?
Question
What are the advantages and disadvantages to growing cash crops?
Question
How has the transition to cash crops affected food security in the developing world?
Question
Discuss the role of transnational corporations in the global food regime.
Question
How did the global food regime develop?
Question
What has the global food regime contributed to hunger reduction?
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Deck 9: Poverty, Development, and Hunger
1
In developing countries, poverty and hunger disproportionally affect

A) women and children.
B) infants.
C) economic growth.
D) spending at globalized chains such as McDonald's and Starbucks.
A
2
The mainstream approach to hunger states that there is enough food, but that the problems are _______ and/or _______.

A) fertilizer supplies; seeds for crops
B) distribution networks; entitlement
C) inadequate rainfall; distribution networks
D) inadequate rainfall; seeds for crops
B
3
A critical alternative view of poverty places more emphasis the availability of

A) common resources.
B) an efficient food supply.
C) genetically modified foods.
D) family planning resources.
A
4
According to the text, the state with the largest proportion of the population infected with COVID-19 is

A) India.
B) Germany.
C) the United States.
D) Brazil.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
According to the text, while food production has increased,

A) the number of people who go hungry has been all but eliminated.
B) food production technology has declined.
C) little impact has been made on the number of people who go hungry.
D) cash crop production has been abolished.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
At base, the mainstream concept of poverty translates to

A) sufficient hard currency but insufficient purchasing power.
B) an almost Calvinist self-betterment.
C) an abundance of liquidity.
D) unfulfilled material needs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which approach to poverty, development, and hunger argues that development follows a linear path from "traditional" to "modern"?

A) Embedded liberalism
B) Mainstream
C) Critical alternative
D) Post-positivist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
What organization has made the distinction between income poverty (a material condition) and human poverty (encompassing human dignity, agency, opportunity, and choices)?

A) UNICEF
B) Oxfam
C) United Nations Development Programme
D) World Bank
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
World Bank data show that the number of people living on less than $1.25 a day was reduced from _______ in 1990 to _______ in 2015.

A) 836 million; 500 million
B) 1.9 billion; 836 million
C) 3 billion; 1.37 billion
D) 5 billion; 3 billion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
What term refers to an international economic order based on the pursuit of free trade, but allowing an appropriate role for state intervention in the market in support of national security and national and global stability?

A) Embedded liberalism
B) Neoliberalism
C) Mercantilism
D) Global capitalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
What view of development argues for a process that is bottom up, participatory, and reliant on appropriate (often local) knowledge and technology, with small investments in small-scale projects and a protection of the commons?

A) Orthodox
B) Alternative
C) World systems
D) Liberal
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The process of development in the orthodox model is generally seen as a(n) _______ approach.

A) bottom-up
B) community-driven
C) obsolete
D) top-down
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
A UN Development Program report on the 1990s stated that no fewer than _______ developing or "in transition" countries had experienced serious economic decline over the previous three decades.

A) 21
B) 33
C) 67
D) 100
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
"Diverse paths, locally driven" is a component of which approach of development?

A) Mercantilist
B) Critical alternative
C) Ethno-centrist
D) Liberal institutionalist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
China, Sri Lanka, Poland, and Cuba _______ under HDI measures than under _______ modes of measurement.

A) score lower; alternative
B) perform the same; unorthodox
C) score higher; orthodox
D) score lower; orthodox
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Time-limited, quantifiable targets across eight areas, including poverty, health, gender, education, environment, and development are known as

A) Development for a Better World.
B) Global Development Now.
C) Millennium Development Goals.
D) Building Tomorrow Today.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Applying neoliberal economic policies that favor a minimalist state and an enhanced role for the market was the focus of the

A) Beltway Agreement.
B) Washington Consensus.
C) Millennial Development Goals.
D) Sustainable Development Goals.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Modernization theory views development as synonymous with

A) increased per capita caloric intake.
B) higher per capita GDP.
C) poverty reduction.
D) economic growth.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Economic growth, according to modernization theory, is required to reduce

A) poverty.
B) hunger.
C) environmental damage.
D) conflict.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
According to modernization theory, countries with lower per capita income are regarded as

A) pastoral.
B) impoverished.
C) less developed.
D) uncivilized.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
In the 1960s and 1970s, _______ stressed how the periphery, or Global South, was actively underdeveloped by policies and decisions that promoted the growth in wealth of the core Western countries and of elites in the periphery.

A) structural realist theorists
B) dependency theorists
C) advocates of the Washington Consensus
D) neoliberals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The orthodox and alternative evaluations of the causes of poverty are based on _______ and they are _______.

A) IMF planning documents; therefore, based on sound statistical evidence
B) Marxist thinking; outmoded with the end of the Cold War
C) GATT data sets; in need of revision by UNCTAD and the G-77
D) different values; measuring different things
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
What regime or institution promotes economic growth through trade liberalization coupled with pro-poor growth and poverty reduction policies?

A) Neoliberalism
B) Post-Washington Consensus
C) Lomé Convention
D) Washington Consensus
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
What term describes the idea that development must meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs?

A) Efficient intertemporal resource allocation
B) Sustainable development
C) Generational development
D) Ecological development
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The UN's Brundtland Commission proposed which of the following?

A) Efficient intertemporal resource allocation
B) Sustainable development
C) Generational development
D) Ecological development
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which country is considered a "new globalizer"?

A) Germany
B) Afghanistan
C) Mexico
D) Canada
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Grassroots movements play an important role in challenging entrenched structures of power in

A) transnational corporations.
B) the Global South.
C) states participating in NAFTA and the USMCA.
D) democratic societies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In 1994, the World Bank came up with its "Operational Policy 4.20," which concerns

A) gender disparities.
B) drug policy.
C) institutional restructuring.
D) sustainable development.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
It is estimated that _______ people around the world did not have enough food in 2015.

A) 100 million
B) 250 million
C) 815 million
D) 2.5 billion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Cash crop production in the developing world is increasingly replacing

A) transnational corporate profits.
B) the developed world.
C) the international system.
D) local subsistence food production.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which writer first proposed a relationship between human population growth and the food supply?

A) Guillermo O'Donnell
B) Thomas Malthus
C) John Watson
D) Adam Smith
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
According to the text, when the human population goes beyond the Earth's _______, disaster is inevitable.

A) efficient intertemporal resource location
B) regeneration rate
C) sustainable threshold
D) carrying capacity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Amartya Sen, in Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation, concludes that hunger is not due to there not being enough to eat; rather, it is because of

A) war.
B) people not having enough to eat.
C) climate change.
D) the slow regeneration rate of resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The global human population has _______ since the 1800s.

A) stayed the same
B) doubled
C) tripled
D) quintupled
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
According to the text, the factor that determines whether a person experiences chronic hunger is not the availability of food but the ability to

A) grow food safely.
B) establish an entitlement to food.
C) produce food.
D) store food for long enough periods of time.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
According to Sen, those least able to procure food entitlements are

A) rural farmers.
B) urban factory workers.
C) landless laborers and pastoralists.
D) the elderly.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
A food system based upon entitlements causes those who lack the _______ to procure food to go hungry.

A) purchasing power
B) ingenuity
C) knowledge
D) military power
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
In developing countries there is/are generally no _______ to ensure people are able to obtain food.

A) food distribution system
B) social security arrangements
C) adequate transportation
D) economic growth
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which type of actor has the largest role in the global food regime?

A) Local communities
B) Indigenous peoples
C) Transnational corporations
D) IGOs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
What state/organization has been the most active in the creation of the global food regime?

A) The United Nations
B) China
C) The European Union
D) The United States
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The domestic production of food staples in developing countries, combined with changes in consumer preferences in importing countries and the creation of export markets, led to

A) dependence on food aid in the developing world.
B) a global decrease in food production.
C) a rise in subsistence farming.
D) food independence in the developing world.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
A stress on _______ production has led towards export-oriented, large-scale, intensively mechanized agriculture in the Global South.

A) GMO crop
B) local
C) cash crop
D) subsistence
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
According to the text, what was an adverse effect of the "Green Revolution"?

A) Too much food caused medical problems associated with overeating
B) Peasants were evicted from their land because their labor was no longer needed
C) The revolutionaries did not consider the long-term impacts of changing the political leadership
D) Stress for farmers because for the first time they had surplus crops that they needed to sell to pay for the "green" seeds
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
What has helped erode local food security?

A) Agricultural trade liberalization
B) Abnormal climate conditions
C) Elongated crop rotation methods combined with the lack of spare tractor parts
D) Seasonal variations in the practices of transhumance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The Group of 77 states are also referred to as

A) the trade union of the poor.
B) OPEC.
C) the global food cartel.
D) the liberal order states.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Promotion of neoliberal economic policies has been accompanied by _______ inequality _______ states.

A) leveling off of; across all
B) elimination of; within all
C) decreasing; between
D) rising; within and among
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The various views on poverty agree on the basic material aspects, such as lack of food, clean water, and sanitation, but there is disagreement on the importance of _______ aspects.

A) economic
B) nonmaterial
C) development
D) governmental
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48
The mainstream or orthodox approach to poverty is based upon which of the following?

A) Per capita water supply
B) Food
C) Money
D) GDP growth
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49
According to the text, as globalization has intensified, poverty, defined in economic terms, has come to characterize significant sectors of populations in

A) both the developing countries of the Global South and in developed countries like the United States.
B) only in the Global South.
C) no region in particular as poverty is declining at such a fast rate.
D) the developed economies of the West, but no longer in the Global South.
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50
Human poverty encompasses which of the following elements?

A) Strictly material conditions
B) Basic survival of the human species
C) Human dignity
D) The lack of financial support for the global commons
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51
The 17 goals set forth by the UN Development Programme to improve quality of life around the world are collectively referred to as the

A) Millennial Development Goals (MDGs).
B) Life Improvement Goals (LIGs).
C) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
D) UN Goals (UNGs).
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52
During the Cold War the majority of third world (now Global South) countries were in the capitalist camp because of

A) former colonial ties.
B) the superior economic performance of the West.
C) a desire for continued closed relations with former colonial powers.
D) the irresistibility of Western values and norms.
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53
What catchphrase informed the strategies of the IMF and World Bank and, importantly, through the Uruguay Round of trade discussions carried out under the auspices of GATT?

A) Four More Years
B) Eight Is Enough
C) Growth the Pie
D) There Is No Alternative
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54
For proponents of neoliberal economic policies, inequality is not a negative aspect but an indicator of

A) the work ethic of less-well-off people.
B) an opportunity for competition and entrepreneurial spirit.
C) Keynesian economics.
D) "trickle-down" economics.
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55
Advocates of a critical alternative approach emphasize the pattern of distribution of gains within global society and within individual states, rather than

A) economic growth.
B) poverty eradication.
C) an increase in per capita caloric intake.
D) an egalitarian distribution of resources.
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56
According to dependency theorists, in the 1960s and 1970s growth in the core countries was achieved through the active underdevelopment of which region?

A) Africa
B) Latin America
C) Global South
D) East Asia
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57
The alternative approach to development and poverty reduction emphasizes the role of _______ in determining the process that is required.

A) the UN
B) NGOs
C) national governments
D) local communities
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58
The alternative approach to development places _______ over _______.

A) markets; growth
B) wealth generation; equity
C) diversity; universality
D) NGOs; people
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59
The North-South agenda has _______ in the years since the Rio Summit.

A) reached its goals
B) changed little
C) changed a great deal
D) not changed
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60
The Chiapas uprising attempted to

A) bring attention to the rapid decease in life expectancy among people living in Gondwanaland.
B) bring attention to the crisis of legitimacy caused by the IMF's SAP for Malta.
C) increase average local purchasing power in Guatemala.
D) bring attention to the needs of indigenous people in Mexico.
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61
What is the purpose of development from the critical alternative point of view?
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62
How does the alternative view envision poverty?
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63
What did the Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation say that the process of development should contain?
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64
Name three of the five points that the alternative approach argues should be the focus of the process of development.
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65
How does the Human Development Index (HDI) differ from earlier mainstream measures of poverty?
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66
What is the relationship between democracy and development?
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67
Have conditions in the developing world changed since the end of the Cold War? How so?
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68
Why have different meanings been attached to the term "poverty"?
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69
What is the relationship between economic liberalism and poverty?
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70
Was the Green Revolution successful?
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71
Explain Malthus's idea concerning the link between population growth and the food supply.
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72
Is local food security important in a globalized economy? Why or why not?
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73
How have organizations such as the UN, IMF, and so on helped or hindered reducing malnourishment around the globe?
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74
How is the US push for agricultural trade liberalization a net positive or a net negative for the Global South?
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75
Using the gendered lens, how does trade liberalization affect the peoples of sub-Saharan Africa?
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76
What are the advantages and disadvantages to growing cash crops?
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77
How has the transition to cash crops affected food security in the developing world?
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78
Discuss the role of transnational corporations in the global food regime.
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79
How did the global food regime develop?
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80
What has the global food regime contributed to hunger reduction?
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