Deck 1: Introduction to Global Politics

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Question
The text asserts that how we _______ is linked to how we react to events that define an era.

A) identify ourselves
B) talk to authority figures
C) learn about the world
D) see the proper role of the state
Use Space or
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to flip the card.
Question
One result of globalization is

A) a reduced need for international cooperation.
B) "Northtoxification."
C) that everything has a "Made in someplace" label, often from a nation-state in the developing world.
D) a lessening of tensions about personal income levels.
Question
According to Henry Kissinger, the nation-state is being challenged by internal and external forces that

A) ultimately will not be able to replace the nation-state itself.
B) had very little impact outside of the home mortgage and banking problems in the United States and Britain.
C) are blamed for all manner of economic problems, but their effects are actually overstated.
D) represent threats to the independence and authority of the nation-state.
Question
According to the text, the term "global politics"

A) undervalues models of decision-makers at the national level.
B) is conceptually more inclusive of all kinds of actors than other terms, such as "international politics."
C) is the only term that captures the moment of time that is not epiphenomenal.
D) forces a person to have an overly narrow definition of politics.
Question
Multinational corporations, human rights groups, and environmental organizations can be examples of

A) transnational actors.
B) transhumance actors.
C) transparent actors.
D) transformative actors.
Question
A civil actor from one country who has dealings with actors in other countries or with an international organization is called a(n)

A) international artifice.
B) transhumance actor.
C) transnational actor.
D) transformative actor.
Question
The _______ is comprised of the people and agencies that control the allocation of public goods and services within a physical territory.

A) United Nations
B) global actor
C) transnational actor
D) government
Question
A(n) _______ is the term given to any actor that is not a government or its agent(s).

A) international artificer
B) nonstate actor
C) uber-state actor
D) global actor
Question
A(n) _______ is a group that has a common language, culture, history, and physical territory.

A) government
B) estate
C) nation
D) e-nation
Question
The term _______ had its origins in Roman law and is a _______ term in political science.

A) state; divisive
B) government; divisive
C) state; unifying
D) government; unifying
Question
"Nation-state" is a problematic term because

A) most states are comprised of more than one nation, which accounts for many problems in the modern international system.
B) all territorial units called "countries" comprise only one nation, so the term is unnecessary.
C) globalization has eroded all sense of national identity.
D) in the contemporary era no elected official ever uses the term, yet it lives on in textbooks.
Question
Many scholars assert that civil wars in states such as Syria and Yemen are the greatest challenge to world politics. They are examples of

A) the system of a hereditary monarch.
B) ungoverned regions, in which the central governing apparatus proves ineffective.
C) the principle of the inviolability of the borders of a state and the activities within.
D) the principle of the permeability of the borders of a state and the activities within.
Question
The Brexit vote is an example of which phenomenon?

A) Human rights and business growth
B) Economic nationalism
C) Markets and growth
D) Defensive power projection
Question
The writer Manuel Castells maintains that if the leaders of nation-states want to respond effectively to the four crises he discusses, they must

A) establish tighter border controls because illegal immigration is undermining states of all kinds.
B) strive to make their countries economically self-sufficient because globalization is stealing jobs from productive countries.
C) confront the cold reality that life is changing and there is nothing to be done; the era of independent nation-states is over.
D) create collaborative networks with nongovernmental organizations and other nonstate actors, a recommendation that sounds paradoxical given the problems of the four crises.
Question
A "theory" is a

A) formal model with hypotheses and assumptions, rather than a personal worldview.
B) law that has been accepted as a definitive explanation for human behavior.
C) deception to get citizens to reach an unpopular decision.
D) simplifying device that helps the analyst decide which facts matter and which facts do not.
Question
According to the text, Wight identified which three traditions in the study of international relations theory?

A) Machiavellian, Grotian, and Kantian
B) Hobbesian, Lockian, and Kantian
C) Machiavellian, Grotian, and Marxist
D) Realist, liberal, and constructivist
Question
The _______ tradition describes the nature of international politics as experiencing constant conflict.

A) pessimistic
B) Machiavellian
C) Kantian
D) liberal
Question
A(n) _______ theory is a standard of the correct moral and ethical behavior about how the world should be.

A) intuitive
B) empirical
C) normative
D) predictive
Question
The statement "It is not fair that some people are rich, and others are starving. Countries should give more food aid" is an expression of a(n) _______ theory.

A) intuitive
B) empirical
C) normative
D) predictive
Question
The strength of a theory comes from

A) how strongly it resonates with us.
B) the evidence in support of its hypotheses.
C) its moral recommendations.
D) how well it predicts future events.
Question
According to the text, a person's worldview theory

A) can only be adopted following a period of study.
B) must be detached from one's personal reflection on society.
C) is distinct from their identity.
D) might be inherited or developed from observing society.
Question
Which academic institution was the first to have a separate department to study international politics?

A) Harvard University
B) University of Wales, Aberystwyth
C) Cambridge University
D) University of California, Berkeley
Question
According to the text, _______ provided the funding to create the first separate university department to study international politics and did so to find ways to help prevent war.

A) David Davies, a Welsh industrialist
B) Raymond Davies, a noted religious official
C) Winston Churchill, a rising politician
D) Lord Peter Wimsey, a wealthy World War I veteran
Question
After World War I, many scholars of international politics believed the goal of their studies should be to make the world a better place. This is known as

A) antiwar activism.
B) realism.
C) idealism.
D) neorealist position.
Question
Between the first and second world wars, the academic perspective known as realism developed. According to this perspective,

A) the world is a dangerous place and people are self-interested at best.
B) the solution to the problem of international security was to create the League of Nations.
C) the world was neither a good place nor a bad place; it was simply the place were humans lived.
D) humans are perfectible if they are taught to be kind to one another.
Question
The interparadigm debate, according to the text, was not so much four different views of the same world, but instead

A) a sterile, academic dispute that had no impact on public policy.
B) a dangerous argument, because it caused anarchy, which in turn caused international war.
C) a lengthy scholarly inquiry into the origins of climate change.
D) four views of different worlds.
Question
Which three academic theories of international relations were the primary focus of the 1980s interparadigm debate?

A) Constructivism, Castells' four crises, Marxism
B) Realism, liberalism, Marxism
C) Hobbesian, realism, liberalism
D) Liberalism, Marxism, Castells' four crises
Question
A _______ theorist believes that state is the result of class forces.

A) liberal
B) Marxist
C) realist
D) constructivist
Question
A _______ theorist believes that ideas about the world are not fixed but change over time.

A) liberal
B) realist
C) Marxist
D) constructivist
Question
Proponents of the academic theories of international relations see globalization differently because

A) they have different ideas about what is most important in world politics.
B) they need to disagree to belong to a school of thought.
C) they have an a posteriori view of what is most important in world politics.
D) they have an ad hominem view of what is most important in world politics.
Question
Many social scientists who study international relations

A) prefer to only describe a particular phenomenon.
B) do not concern themselves with theoretical mechanisms.
C) avoid using big data and programming languages to analyze political phenomena.
D) seek to explain, predict, or make policy prescriptions.
Question
For many social scientists who study international relations, there are four kinds of independent variables. These are

A) individual, personal, war, and peace.
B) individual, national attributes, systemic, and global.
C) domestic, national attributes, economics, and human rights.
D) systemic, global, international, and world.
Question
The _______ level of analysis seeks to explain the preferences of leaders.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Question
A state's history, traditions, and political structures are examples of the _______ level of analysis.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Question
A scholar asserts that movement of capital and environmental problems explain an outcome. This is an example of the _______ level of analysis.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Question
Respecting the sovereignty of states and following the rule of international law are examples of the _______ level of analysis.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Question
The process of growing interconnectedness between societies such that events in one part of the world increasingly effect peoples and societies far away is called

A) parsimony.
B) worldview.
C) globalization.
D) world politics.
Question
Unlike in the physical sciences, social scientists

A) can conduct experiments easily.
B) are unable to consider documents, interviews, and media accounts as real evidence.
C) have difficulty conducting experiments with control groups.
D) frequently encounter ethical dilemmas when planning research.
Question
What are the three kinds of hypotheses?

A) Causal, relational, and impact
B) War, peace, and economics
C) Global, systemic, and national attributes
D) Marxist, liberal, and realist
Question
The statement "more rain means more floods" is an example of a(n) _______ hypothesis.

A) causal
B) liberal
C) Marxist
D) impact
Question
The statement "scarce oil supplies lead to wars" is an example of a(n) _______ hypothesis.

A) causal
B) Marxist
C) relational
D) impact
Question
Thucydides wrote that the distribution of power between the Greek city-states caused the Peloponnesian War. This is an example of the _______ level of analysis.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Question
Constructivist scholars tend to assert that

A) all wars are the result of rapid system changes.
B) gender-based identity politics explains policy outcomes.
C) there is no single historical narrative; therefore, no single perspective holds the truth.
D) peace is possible if domestic transformation happens first.
Question
"Global polity" means

A) collective structures and processes for decision-making.
B) the devolution of processes to substate actors.
C) more jobs for unemployed workers, but higher taxation as a result.
D) a police force for the entire world.
Question
Global warming, militant religious groups, and pandemics can all be part of what the text calls a

A) cosmopolitan culture.
B) global polity.
C) risk culture.
D) sovereign culture.
Question
Why might some scholars view globalization as a "myth"?

A) There is no evidence that the world is becoming more interconnected.
B) Globalization exclusively affects late-stage capitalist economies.
C) The increase in wealth is too one-sided to be considered global.
D) There is an abundance of historical evidence on the nature of "globalization."
Question
Some writers believe that the greatest problem with global governance is that

A) people will gain with global governance.
B) the nonstate institutions are not accountable for their actions.
C) capital flows are often retrograde.
D) the nonstate institutions are often no more than what Chairman Mao once called "paper tigers."
Question
The social theory suggesting all actors make decisions with fixed preferences and seek to maximize benefits and minimize costs is called

A) neoclassical realism theory.
B) rational choice theory.
C) neoliberal theory.
D) neorealism.
Question
The firm that makes a key component of the iPhone outsources production of it to India and Taiwan because

A) although the firm did not want to do this, Apple Computer insisted.
B) economies of scale neglect the human costs of capital transitions.
C) the part can be made cheaply, and the firm spends the savings on research and development.
D) it seeks to eliminate jobs in its home state.
Question
The historical process involving a fundamental shift or transformation in the spatial scale of human social organization that links distant communities is called

A) the crises of globalization.
B) Marxism.
C) democratic centralism.
D) globalization.
Question
According to the text, the Grotian tradition is most concerned with

A) the power of states.
B) the rule of law.
C) class divisions.
D) human interactions and communities.
Question
What entity exercises the monopoly of legal force within its territorial bounds?

A) The state
B) The nation
C) The international system
D) The government
Question
A scholar who is interested in the interactions between corporate and governmental entities would most likely be which type of theorist?

A) Normative
B) Kantian
C) Marxist
D) Liberal
Question
A paradox of globalization is that

A) only Western states have experienced economic growth because they have the largest economies.
B) no Western state has experienced a high degree of growth despite having the largest contribution of globalizing forces.
C) some non-Western states have experienced high rates of economic growth despite having non-Western views of the state.
D) no non-Western state has benefitted from globalization despite being the source of many consumer goods.
Question
Marxist scholars believe that state behavior is determined by

A) rational choice theory.
B) class forces.
C) nonstate actors.
D) the changing conception of the state.
Question
What are the ways in which you are linked to globalization?
Question
How do ideas about globalization shape our understanding of the trend?
Question
How can different levels of analysis lead to different explanations of the impact of globalization on global politics?
Question
International relations began as a problem-solving discipline in response to World War I. What are the global problems that now define our field of study?
Question
What are some of the positive impacts that globalization might have on local communities around the world? What are some negative effects?
Question
Write an essay in which you connect an average day in your life to globalization.
Question
Are you more or less connected to global economy than the text suggests?
Question
What is your worldview?
Question
What is the impact of global actors on our understanding of international relations?
Question
Why do theories matter?
Question
Is globalization a new phenomenon in world politics?
Question
Is globalization a "myth"? Why or why not?
Question
What are the strengths and weakness of the three most commonly used theoretical traditions?
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Deck 1: Introduction to Global Politics
1
The text asserts that how we _______ is linked to how we react to events that define an era.

A) identify ourselves
B) talk to authority figures
C) learn about the world
D) see the proper role of the state
A
2
One result of globalization is

A) a reduced need for international cooperation.
B) "Northtoxification."
C) that everything has a "Made in someplace" label, often from a nation-state in the developing world.
D) a lessening of tensions about personal income levels.
C
3
According to Henry Kissinger, the nation-state is being challenged by internal and external forces that

A) ultimately will not be able to replace the nation-state itself.
B) had very little impact outside of the home mortgage and banking problems in the United States and Britain.
C) are blamed for all manner of economic problems, but their effects are actually overstated.
D) represent threats to the independence and authority of the nation-state.
D
4
According to the text, the term "global politics"

A) undervalues models of decision-makers at the national level.
B) is conceptually more inclusive of all kinds of actors than other terms, such as "international politics."
C) is the only term that captures the moment of time that is not epiphenomenal.
D) forces a person to have an overly narrow definition of politics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Multinational corporations, human rights groups, and environmental organizations can be examples of

A) transnational actors.
B) transhumance actors.
C) transparent actors.
D) transformative actors.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
A civil actor from one country who has dealings with actors in other countries or with an international organization is called a(n)

A) international artifice.
B) transhumance actor.
C) transnational actor.
D) transformative actor.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The _______ is comprised of the people and agencies that control the allocation of public goods and services within a physical territory.

A) United Nations
B) global actor
C) transnational actor
D) government
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
A(n) _______ is the term given to any actor that is not a government or its agent(s).

A) international artificer
B) nonstate actor
C) uber-state actor
D) global actor
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
A(n) _______ is a group that has a common language, culture, history, and physical territory.

A) government
B) estate
C) nation
D) e-nation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The term _______ had its origins in Roman law and is a _______ term in political science.

A) state; divisive
B) government; divisive
C) state; unifying
D) government; unifying
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
"Nation-state" is a problematic term because

A) most states are comprised of more than one nation, which accounts for many problems in the modern international system.
B) all territorial units called "countries" comprise only one nation, so the term is unnecessary.
C) globalization has eroded all sense of national identity.
D) in the contemporary era no elected official ever uses the term, yet it lives on in textbooks.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Many scholars assert that civil wars in states such as Syria and Yemen are the greatest challenge to world politics. They are examples of

A) the system of a hereditary monarch.
B) ungoverned regions, in which the central governing apparatus proves ineffective.
C) the principle of the inviolability of the borders of a state and the activities within.
D) the principle of the permeability of the borders of a state and the activities within.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The Brexit vote is an example of which phenomenon?

A) Human rights and business growth
B) Economic nationalism
C) Markets and growth
D) Defensive power projection
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The writer Manuel Castells maintains that if the leaders of nation-states want to respond effectively to the four crises he discusses, they must

A) establish tighter border controls because illegal immigration is undermining states of all kinds.
B) strive to make their countries economically self-sufficient because globalization is stealing jobs from productive countries.
C) confront the cold reality that life is changing and there is nothing to be done; the era of independent nation-states is over.
D) create collaborative networks with nongovernmental organizations and other nonstate actors, a recommendation that sounds paradoxical given the problems of the four crises.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
A "theory" is a

A) formal model with hypotheses and assumptions, rather than a personal worldview.
B) law that has been accepted as a definitive explanation for human behavior.
C) deception to get citizens to reach an unpopular decision.
D) simplifying device that helps the analyst decide which facts matter and which facts do not.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
According to the text, Wight identified which three traditions in the study of international relations theory?

A) Machiavellian, Grotian, and Kantian
B) Hobbesian, Lockian, and Kantian
C) Machiavellian, Grotian, and Marxist
D) Realist, liberal, and constructivist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The _______ tradition describes the nature of international politics as experiencing constant conflict.

A) pessimistic
B) Machiavellian
C) Kantian
D) liberal
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
A(n) _______ theory is a standard of the correct moral and ethical behavior about how the world should be.

A) intuitive
B) empirical
C) normative
D) predictive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The statement "It is not fair that some people are rich, and others are starving. Countries should give more food aid" is an expression of a(n) _______ theory.

A) intuitive
B) empirical
C) normative
D) predictive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The strength of a theory comes from

A) how strongly it resonates with us.
B) the evidence in support of its hypotheses.
C) its moral recommendations.
D) how well it predicts future events.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to the text, a person's worldview theory

A) can only be adopted following a period of study.
B) must be detached from one's personal reflection on society.
C) is distinct from their identity.
D) might be inherited or developed from observing society.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Which academic institution was the first to have a separate department to study international politics?

A) Harvard University
B) University of Wales, Aberystwyth
C) Cambridge University
D) University of California, Berkeley
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
According to the text, _______ provided the funding to create the first separate university department to study international politics and did so to find ways to help prevent war.

A) David Davies, a Welsh industrialist
B) Raymond Davies, a noted religious official
C) Winston Churchill, a rising politician
D) Lord Peter Wimsey, a wealthy World War I veteran
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
After World War I, many scholars of international politics believed the goal of their studies should be to make the world a better place. This is known as

A) antiwar activism.
B) realism.
C) idealism.
D) neorealist position.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Between the first and second world wars, the academic perspective known as realism developed. According to this perspective,

A) the world is a dangerous place and people are self-interested at best.
B) the solution to the problem of international security was to create the League of Nations.
C) the world was neither a good place nor a bad place; it was simply the place were humans lived.
D) humans are perfectible if they are taught to be kind to one another.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The interparadigm debate, according to the text, was not so much four different views of the same world, but instead

A) a sterile, academic dispute that had no impact on public policy.
B) a dangerous argument, because it caused anarchy, which in turn caused international war.
C) a lengthy scholarly inquiry into the origins of climate change.
D) four views of different worlds.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Which three academic theories of international relations were the primary focus of the 1980s interparadigm debate?

A) Constructivism, Castells' four crises, Marxism
B) Realism, liberalism, Marxism
C) Hobbesian, realism, liberalism
D) Liberalism, Marxism, Castells' four crises
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
A _______ theorist believes that state is the result of class forces.

A) liberal
B) Marxist
C) realist
D) constructivist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
A _______ theorist believes that ideas about the world are not fixed but change over time.

A) liberal
B) realist
C) Marxist
D) constructivist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Proponents of the academic theories of international relations see globalization differently because

A) they have different ideas about what is most important in world politics.
B) they need to disagree to belong to a school of thought.
C) they have an a posteriori view of what is most important in world politics.
D) they have an ad hominem view of what is most important in world politics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Many social scientists who study international relations

A) prefer to only describe a particular phenomenon.
B) do not concern themselves with theoretical mechanisms.
C) avoid using big data and programming languages to analyze political phenomena.
D) seek to explain, predict, or make policy prescriptions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
For many social scientists who study international relations, there are four kinds of independent variables. These are

A) individual, personal, war, and peace.
B) individual, national attributes, systemic, and global.
C) domestic, national attributes, economics, and human rights.
D) systemic, global, international, and world.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The _______ level of analysis seeks to explain the preferences of leaders.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
A state's history, traditions, and political structures are examples of the _______ level of analysis.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
A scholar asserts that movement of capital and environmental problems explain an outcome. This is an example of the _______ level of analysis.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Respecting the sovereignty of states and following the rule of international law are examples of the _______ level of analysis.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The process of growing interconnectedness between societies such that events in one part of the world increasingly effect peoples and societies far away is called

A) parsimony.
B) worldview.
C) globalization.
D) world politics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Unlike in the physical sciences, social scientists

A) can conduct experiments easily.
B) are unable to consider documents, interviews, and media accounts as real evidence.
C) have difficulty conducting experiments with control groups.
D) frequently encounter ethical dilemmas when planning research.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
What are the three kinds of hypotheses?

A) Causal, relational, and impact
B) War, peace, and economics
C) Global, systemic, and national attributes
D) Marxist, liberal, and realist
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The statement "more rain means more floods" is an example of a(n) _______ hypothesis.

A) causal
B) liberal
C) Marxist
D) impact
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The statement "scarce oil supplies lead to wars" is an example of a(n) _______ hypothesis.

A) causal
B) Marxist
C) relational
D) impact
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Thucydides wrote that the distribution of power between the Greek city-states caused the Peloponnesian War. This is an example of the _______ level of analysis.

A) individual
B) national attributes
C) systemic
D) global
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Constructivist scholars tend to assert that

A) all wars are the result of rapid system changes.
B) gender-based identity politics explains policy outcomes.
C) there is no single historical narrative; therefore, no single perspective holds the truth.
D) peace is possible if domestic transformation happens first.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 68 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
"Global polity" means

A) collective structures and processes for decision-making.
B) the devolution of processes to substate actors.
C) more jobs for unemployed workers, but higher taxation as a result.
D) a police force for the entire world.
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45
Global warming, militant religious groups, and pandemics can all be part of what the text calls a

A) cosmopolitan culture.
B) global polity.
C) risk culture.
D) sovereign culture.
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46
Why might some scholars view globalization as a "myth"?

A) There is no evidence that the world is becoming more interconnected.
B) Globalization exclusively affects late-stage capitalist economies.
C) The increase in wealth is too one-sided to be considered global.
D) There is an abundance of historical evidence on the nature of "globalization."
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47
Some writers believe that the greatest problem with global governance is that

A) people will gain with global governance.
B) the nonstate institutions are not accountable for their actions.
C) capital flows are often retrograde.
D) the nonstate institutions are often no more than what Chairman Mao once called "paper tigers."
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48
The social theory suggesting all actors make decisions with fixed preferences and seek to maximize benefits and minimize costs is called

A) neoclassical realism theory.
B) rational choice theory.
C) neoliberal theory.
D) neorealism.
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49
The firm that makes a key component of the iPhone outsources production of it to India and Taiwan because

A) although the firm did not want to do this, Apple Computer insisted.
B) economies of scale neglect the human costs of capital transitions.
C) the part can be made cheaply, and the firm spends the savings on research and development.
D) it seeks to eliminate jobs in its home state.
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50
The historical process involving a fundamental shift or transformation in the spatial scale of human social organization that links distant communities is called

A) the crises of globalization.
B) Marxism.
C) democratic centralism.
D) globalization.
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51
According to the text, the Grotian tradition is most concerned with

A) the power of states.
B) the rule of law.
C) class divisions.
D) human interactions and communities.
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52
What entity exercises the monopoly of legal force within its territorial bounds?

A) The state
B) The nation
C) The international system
D) The government
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53
A scholar who is interested in the interactions between corporate and governmental entities would most likely be which type of theorist?

A) Normative
B) Kantian
C) Marxist
D) Liberal
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54
A paradox of globalization is that

A) only Western states have experienced economic growth because they have the largest economies.
B) no Western state has experienced a high degree of growth despite having the largest contribution of globalizing forces.
C) some non-Western states have experienced high rates of economic growth despite having non-Western views of the state.
D) no non-Western state has benefitted from globalization despite being the source of many consumer goods.
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55
Marxist scholars believe that state behavior is determined by

A) rational choice theory.
B) class forces.
C) nonstate actors.
D) the changing conception of the state.
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56
What are the ways in which you are linked to globalization?
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57
How do ideas about globalization shape our understanding of the trend?
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58
How can different levels of analysis lead to different explanations of the impact of globalization on global politics?
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59
International relations began as a problem-solving discipline in response to World War I. What are the global problems that now define our field of study?
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60
What are some of the positive impacts that globalization might have on local communities around the world? What are some negative effects?
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61
Write an essay in which you connect an average day in your life to globalization.
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62
Are you more or less connected to global economy than the text suggests?
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63
What is your worldview?
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64
What is the impact of global actors on our understanding of international relations?
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65
Why do theories matter?
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66
Is globalization a new phenomenon in world politics?
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67
Is globalization a "myth"? Why or why not?
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68
What are the strengths and weakness of the three most commonly used theoretical traditions?
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