Deck 1: What Is Development? From Economic Growth to the Sustainable Development Goals

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Question
What does the 2019 fires in the Amazon say about development policies in Brazil?

A) Environmental degradation should be stopped
B) An emphasis on climate change data
C) Indicators of urbanization, infrastructure, and development
D) An emphasis on business interests
E) The complexity of interdependence
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Question
The modern concept of "development" is often traced back to the Inaugural Address made by which former US president?

A) Harry S. Truman
B) Franklin D. Roosevelt
C) Dwight D. Eisenhower
D) John F. Kennedy
E) Lyndon B. Johnson
Question
Which of the following was implied by the term "underdeveloped"?

A) That development is desirable by all
B) The possibility of unlimited economic progress
C) A single, overarching scale to compare nations against each other
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
Question
Originally, the concept of a "Third World" represented which of the following?

A) The breakdown of political barriers to development
B) An alternative to dominant world power structures during the Cold War
C) The creation of a dialogue between developing countries
D) A demand for development policies that were fair
E) A pejorative, patronizing term that im?plies a world hierarchy and a single path to development
Question
Which of the following is NOT considered one of the original Newly Industrialized Countries (NICs)?

A) Hong Kong
B) Taiwan
C) Singapore
D) Thailand
E) South Korea
Question
A country's status as "developed" or "developing" has conventionally been measured by reference to what?

A) Its literacy rate
B) Its Human Development Index
C) Its Gross Domestic Product
D) Its life expectancy
E) Its level of gender equality
Question
Which of the following is NOT associated with the term "Fourth World"?

A) The poorest of the poor countries
B) "Failed states"
C) The internal colonization of Indigenous peoples
D) An alternative political movement of poor country solidarity
E) All of the above are associated with the term
Question
Why has the label "Global South" gained favour over other, somewhat misleading, terms?

A) It better incorporates historical and contemporary patters of wealth and power into a loosely geographically defined concept
B) It departs from popular beliefs that poverty and social conditions are still identified with the Third World
C) The label "south" is a better fit to the geographical conditions of poverty
D) The geographical term "south" implies democracy
E) The term "south" is meant as a pejorative
Question
What is the reason for measuring purchasing power parity (PPP)?

A) To demonstrate the benefits of "fair trade"
B) To show how developing countries operate under their own economic logic
C) To justify the existence of vast economic inequalities
D) To show the need for land redistribution
E) To compare incomes across countries by accounting for different costs in different economies
Question
Development economist Jeffery Sachs argues that since 1820, the gap in GDP per capita between developing and developed countries has increased how many times?

A) Two
B) Five
C) Ten
D) Twenty
E) Fifty
Question
The use of gross domestic product (GDP) per capita as a measure of poverty is criticized for its failure to reflect which of the following?

A) Income distribution
B) Purchasing power parity
C) Export rates
D) Poverty levels
E) Employment rates
Question
Which of the following is NOT true regarding the distribution of income?

A) It is measured by the Gini coefficient
B) It is measured by comparing the incomes of different strata of society
C) It is very unequal in most developing countries
D) It acts as a constraint on development
E) It is not very important since growth at the top "trickles down" to the poor
Question
Which of the following is NOT true of the concept of "social capital"?

A) It refers to the extent to which individuals are willing to cooperate in the pursuit of shared goals
B) It entails the investment of money and resources in social activities
C) It is undermined by the existence of persistent and growing inequality
D) Its absence or erosion may constrain a country's development potential
E) It is thought to be essential to the growth of a civic democratic culture
Question
What is relative poverty?

A) Poverty that does not threaten a person's daily survival but makes it difficult to participate fully in society
B) Poverty that has a "moderate" impact on living conditions
C) Poverty that places a person below the minimum level of income necessary to meet their basic physical needs
D) Economic hardships that almost all people experience
E) Poverty caused by the lack of family support
Question
What is moderate poverty?

A) A condition of economic dissatisfaction with total household income
B) An income level that leads to a kind of poverty that does not threaten physical survival but where an individual may not have the income necessary to fully participate in their soci?ety
C) An income level of US$3.20 per day, where basic human needs are barely met but physical survival is not threatened
D) A situation that exists mostly among the elderly in developing countries
E) A GDP per capita of less than US$5 a day
Question
According to the capabilities approach, development should be measured by an individual's ability to do what?

A) Purchase necessities
B) Make choices that allow them to live their lives in ways they value
C) Purchase a home
D) Participate in the political system
E) Pursue their economic self-interest
Question
Which of the following does the Human Development Index NOT measure?

A) Life expectancy at birth
B) Adult literacy rate
C) School enrolment rates
D) Gross domestic product per capita
E) Human gender equality
Question
What are the successors to the Millennium Development Goals?

A) The Sustainable Development Goals
B) The Generational Development Goals
C) The Gender Development Goals
D) The Human Development Goals
E) The Post-Millennium Development Goals
Question
According to Arturo Escobar, which of the following calls into question the validity of the contemporary development enterprise?

A) Linear progression
B) Colonial roots
C) Environmental degradation
D) Positionality
E) Failure to demonstrate results
Question
What is cosmopolitanism?

A) An ethical position that suggests people should be treated differently based on their income
B) An ethical position that holds national boundaries to be highly relevant
C) An ethical position that contends that the state has no obligation to non-citizens
D) An ethical position that argues that some common values apply across humanity and therefore national borders have a low moral importance
E) An ethical position that believes that it is more interesting to live in cities
Question
Which of the following is true about rights-based approaches to global justice and poverty?

A) They form the basis for most international law today
B) They justify moral claims on the basis of fundamental entitlement to act or be treated in specific ways
C) They justify moral claims on the basis of fundamental entitlements to act or be treated equally
D) They enshrine individual rights in national constitutions
E) They justify moral claims on the basis of an individual's rights
Question
Peter Singer uses what analogy to ask if frivolous spending is more morally important than the life of humans in the Global South?

A) The Drowning Child Analogy
B) The Analogy of Linear History
C) The Domestic Analogy
D) The Analogy of Comparable Worth
E) The Humanitarian Analogy
Question
The neoliberal position in development borrows from the ideas of libertarian Robert Nozick in arguing which of the following?

A) The primacy of collective rights over individual rights
B) The necessity of wealth redistribution
C) The right of individuals to own private property
D) A moral obligation of the state to provide for the poor
E) That a free-market economy is immoral
Question
What is positionality?

A) The strategic directions of NGOs
B) The inherent political and social biases of economic development programs
C) The position of conflicting values that exist in economic development programs
D) The social and power relationships in which people are embedded
E) The orientation of an economy for trade and production
Question
What is a development tourist?

A) Someone who works as a development consultant and dispenses advice with little knowledge of local conditions
B) Someone who volunteers on development projects when on vacations abroad
C) Someone who develops commercial tourist opportunities in less developed countries
D) Someone who scouts development opportunities
E) Someone who works as a development consultant and dispenses advice with excellent knowledge of local conditions
Question
The massive fires seen in 2019 in Brazil are emblematic of international development because:

A) Brazil is in the Global South
B) The native language of Brazil is not English
C) The fires reveal the extreme complexity of international development including issues of culture, climate, and politics
D) Brazil is the most powerful country in South America and exercises great influences over other countries in the region
E) The agricultural and industrial development model in Brazil is an example of efficiency and sustainability
Question
The study and practice of international development has as its goal:

A) To understand why so many people are poor and how to increase their economic power
B) To explain the diversity in the world with respect to human well-being
C) To eliminate global poverty by 2030
D) To spread democracy throughout the world
E) To establish neo-colonialism policies worldwide
Question
Labelling countries as "First World" or "Third World" can be problematic because:

A) Labels like these imply countries are on similar political and economic paths
B) Labels like these can be seen as pejorative
C) Labels like these can create neo-colonial attitudes on the part of First-World countries
D) Labels like these create dependencies on the part of the Third-World countries for things like aid and foreign assistance
E) All of the above
Question
Which of the following is NOT typically seen as an emerging economy?

A) Thailand
B) India
C) South Africa
D) Taiwan
E) Singapore
Question
Which of the following would NOT be a valid measure of national or international development?

A) Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
B) GINI Coefficient
C) Number of consumer durables in a country
D) Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
E) Gross National Income (GNI) per capita
Question
Social capital is:

A) a measure of how much individuals are willing to co-operate in the pursuit of shared goals
B) another term for GDP
C) a measure of civil unrest in a society
D) a measure of how many people participate in social activities in a given community
E) a measure of how many people are excluded from social activities in a given community
Question
Amartya Sen's Capability Model for analyzing development was critical because it showed:

A) the importance of measures of development that go beyond GDP per capita
B) how poor countries cannot develop without democracy
C) how global climate change affected developing nations
D) that current models in international development are just examples of neo-colonialism
E) why people with relatively middle incomes could still have relatively high birth rates
Question
In the context of international development, the term "development" is a contested idea because many believe:

A) it is a form of neo-colonialism
B) it legitimates the global expansion of capitalism
C) so-called developed countries benefit more from international development than the developing countries do
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
Question
The Millennium Development Goals were ground-breaking because:

A) they emerged in 2000 thus heralding a new beginning
B) they focused on poverty reduction, were simple, measurable, and had deadlines associated with them
C) they were developed through international consultations
D) they focused on democracy and human rights
E) they gave way to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Question
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) differed from the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in the following important ways:

A) the SDGs focus on inequality; climate change; and a global partnership with developing economies
B) the SDGs employed the principles of "leave no one behind"
C) the SDGs emphasized a holistic view of development rather than focusing on single issues like economics
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
Question
In Truman's inaugural speech, he indicated underdevelopment was a threat to the entire world.
Question
Absolute poverty is defined by the World Bank as an income below US$3.20 per day.
Question
French demographer Alfred Sauvy used the term tiers monde ("Third World") to refer countries outside the Eastern and Western power blocs during the Cold War.
Question
The act of labeling is politically neutral.
Question
Gross domestic product (GDP) per capita is useful for measuring inequality.
Question
The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) emerged as a political bloc alternative to the Soviet and American superpowers.
Question
"Developing countries" are perceived as politically stable regimes.
Question
Libertarian philosophy argues that individual rights, especially to acquire and retain private property, are the central moral good.
Question
Positionality describes the way states are economically positioned toward one another.
Question
When GDP per capita reaches the level of a middle-income developing country, it is assumed industrialization has occurred.
Question
Relative poverty is defined as a type of poverty that threatens daily survival.
Question
The "Fourth World" originally referred to the internal colonization of Indigenous Peoples.
Question
The World Bank has classified countries into low-, middle-, and high-income groups as a means of determining their loan eligibility.
Question
The terms used to describe people, places, and processes within international development reflect the evolution of thinking about the relationship among nations.
Question
"Growth with equity" is a strategy that focuses on maximizing GDP growth with no concern for how that growth is distributed.
Question
Income inequality can be measured in two ways: by measuring the income of the different strata of the population and by using the Gini coefficient.
Question
More growth in an economy always leads to a reduction in poverty rates.
Question
The UN's Human Development Report is philosophically and intellectually in line with the World Bank's World Development Report.
Question
Cosmopolitan arguments suggest that justice does not need to be universal.
Question
Communitarianism assumes national borders have high moral importance.
Question
Accepting the concept of positionality means that the development practitioner has little need to reflect on their relative power position vis-à-vis individuals in local societies.
Question
The Human Development Index does not measure school enrolment rates.
Question
Denis Goulet's view that development should promote "life-sustenance" is an example of a multi-dimensional view of development.
Question
Thomas Pogge argues that an economic order should be seen as unjust if it causes human rights violations that could be avoided under a different set of institutions.
Question
Development ethics deals with, in part, how development practitioners and researchers should act.
Question
In 2019, the Amazon region saw fires burning at a rate not seen in decades. This was mostly because foreign mining interests wanted access to gold mines.
Question
The Paris Agreement on Climate Change was signed (but not ratified) in 2016.
Question
In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic forced developing and developed countries to shut down their economies, plunging the world into an economic and human well-being crisis.
Question
The study of international development aims to explain both the diversity evident in the world in relation to human well-being and the common patterns that emerge when comparing people, social groups, nations, economic and political systems, and regions of the world.
Question
Critical theorists have pointed out that labeling plays at least two important roles: labels make existing practices appear legitimate, and they also shape future policy-making.
Question
Harry Truman's 1949 speech is the first time a politician of that stature used the term "development." By development, Truman meant a single, overarching scale on which to compare nations' success or progress in relation to each other.
Question
The conception of a "Third World" was first developed by Amartya Sen.
Question
A country's gross domestic product (GDP) is a measure of how much money each person in the country makes in a year.
Question
Income inequality is an important concept to understand and measure because it has been shown to be an important constraint on development.
Question
According to Amartya Sen, many of the "unfreedoms" that people experience are really their own fault.
Question
How does international development explore the diversity in human well-being?
Question
What is absolute poverty? How does it differ from both moderate poverty and relative poverty?
Question
What are the strengths and weaknesses of the World Bank's approach to measuring development?
Question
What are the basic principles of the capabilities approach?
Question
What are the implications of the concept of "positionality" as it relates to development researchers and practitioners?
Question
What is the "distribution of income" and what impacts does it have on development?
Question
What is the significance of the term "growth with equity"?
Question
What are the two uses of the term "Fourth World"?
Question
What is the "Global South"?
Question
What is the libertarian view as it relates to wealth and poverty?
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Deck 1: What Is Development? From Economic Growth to the Sustainable Development Goals
1
What does the 2019 fires in the Amazon say about development policies in Brazil?

A) Environmental degradation should be stopped
B) An emphasis on climate change data
C) Indicators of urbanization, infrastructure, and development
D) An emphasis on business interests
E) The complexity of interdependence
D
2
The modern concept of "development" is often traced back to the Inaugural Address made by which former US president?

A) Harry S. Truman
B) Franklin D. Roosevelt
C) Dwight D. Eisenhower
D) John F. Kennedy
E) Lyndon B. Johnson
A
3
Which of the following was implied by the term "underdeveloped"?

A) That development is desirable by all
B) The possibility of unlimited economic progress
C) A single, overarching scale to compare nations against each other
D) All of the above
E) None of the above
C
4
Originally, the concept of a "Third World" represented which of the following?

A) The breakdown of political barriers to development
B) An alternative to dominant world power structures during the Cold War
C) The creation of a dialogue between developing countries
D) A demand for development policies that were fair
E) A pejorative, patronizing term that im?plies a world hierarchy and a single path to development
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Which of the following is NOT considered one of the original Newly Industrialized Countries (NICs)?

A) Hong Kong
B) Taiwan
C) Singapore
D) Thailand
E) South Korea
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
A country's status as "developed" or "developing" has conventionally been measured by reference to what?

A) Its literacy rate
B) Its Human Development Index
C) Its Gross Domestic Product
D) Its life expectancy
E) Its level of gender equality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following is NOT associated with the term "Fourth World"?

A) The poorest of the poor countries
B) "Failed states"
C) The internal colonization of Indigenous peoples
D) An alternative political movement of poor country solidarity
E) All of the above are associated with the term
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Why has the label "Global South" gained favour over other, somewhat misleading, terms?

A) It better incorporates historical and contemporary patters of wealth and power into a loosely geographically defined concept
B) It departs from popular beliefs that poverty and social conditions are still identified with the Third World
C) The label "south" is a better fit to the geographical conditions of poverty
D) The geographical term "south" implies democracy
E) The term "south" is meant as a pejorative
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
What is the reason for measuring purchasing power parity (PPP)?

A) To demonstrate the benefits of "fair trade"
B) To show how developing countries operate under their own economic logic
C) To justify the existence of vast economic inequalities
D) To show the need for land redistribution
E) To compare incomes across countries by accounting for different costs in different economies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Development economist Jeffery Sachs argues that since 1820, the gap in GDP per capita between developing and developed countries has increased how many times?

A) Two
B) Five
C) Ten
D) Twenty
E) Fifty
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The use of gross domestic product (GDP) per capita as a measure of poverty is criticized for its failure to reflect which of the following?

A) Income distribution
B) Purchasing power parity
C) Export rates
D) Poverty levels
E) Employment rates
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following is NOT true regarding the distribution of income?

A) It is measured by the Gini coefficient
B) It is measured by comparing the incomes of different strata of society
C) It is very unequal in most developing countries
D) It acts as a constraint on development
E) It is not very important since growth at the top "trickles down" to the poor
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which of the following is NOT true of the concept of "social capital"?

A) It refers to the extent to which individuals are willing to cooperate in the pursuit of shared goals
B) It entails the investment of money and resources in social activities
C) It is undermined by the existence of persistent and growing inequality
D) Its absence or erosion may constrain a country's development potential
E) It is thought to be essential to the growth of a civic democratic culture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
What is relative poverty?

A) Poverty that does not threaten a person's daily survival but makes it difficult to participate fully in society
B) Poverty that has a "moderate" impact on living conditions
C) Poverty that places a person below the minimum level of income necessary to meet their basic physical needs
D) Economic hardships that almost all people experience
E) Poverty caused by the lack of family support
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
What is moderate poverty?

A) A condition of economic dissatisfaction with total household income
B) An income level that leads to a kind of poverty that does not threaten physical survival but where an individual may not have the income necessary to fully participate in their soci?ety
C) An income level of US$3.20 per day, where basic human needs are barely met but physical survival is not threatened
D) A situation that exists mostly among the elderly in developing countries
E) A GDP per capita of less than US$5 a day
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
According to the capabilities approach, development should be measured by an individual's ability to do what?

A) Purchase necessities
B) Make choices that allow them to live their lives in ways they value
C) Purchase a home
D) Participate in the political system
E) Pursue their economic self-interest
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Which of the following does the Human Development Index NOT measure?

A) Life expectancy at birth
B) Adult literacy rate
C) School enrolment rates
D) Gross domestic product per capita
E) Human gender equality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
What are the successors to the Millennium Development Goals?

A) The Sustainable Development Goals
B) The Generational Development Goals
C) The Gender Development Goals
D) The Human Development Goals
E) The Post-Millennium Development Goals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
According to Arturo Escobar, which of the following calls into question the validity of the contemporary development enterprise?

A) Linear progression
B) Colonial roots
C) Environmental degradation
D) Positionality
E) Failure to demonstrate results
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
What is cosmopolitanism?

A) An ethical position that suggests people should be treated differently based on their income
B) An ethical position that holds national boundaries to be highly relevant
C) An ethical position that contends that the state has no obligation to non-citizens
D) An ethical position that argues that some common values apply across humanity and therefore national borders have a low moral importance
E) An ethical position that believes that it is more interesting to live in cities
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Which of the following is true about rights-based approaches to global justice and poverty?

A) They form the basis for most international law today
B) They justify moral claims on the basis of fundamental entitlement to act or be treated in specific ways
C) They justify moral claims on the basis of fundamental entitlements to act or be treated equally
D) They enshrine individual rights in national constitutions
E) They justify moral claims on the basis of an individual's rights
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Peter Singer uses what analogy to ask if frivolous spending is more morally important than the life of humans in the Global South?

A) The Drowning Child Analogy
B) The Analogy of Linear History
C) The Domestic Analogy
D) The Analogy of Comparable Worth
E) The Humanitarian Analogy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The neoliberal position in development borrows from the ideas of libertarian Robert Nozick in arguing which of the following?

A) The primacy of collective rights over individual rights
B) The necessity of wealth redistribution
C) The right of individuals to own private property
D) A moral obligation of the state to provide for the poor
E) That a free-market economy is immoral
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
What is positionality?

A) The strategic directions of NGOs
B) The inherent political and social biases of economic development programs
C) The position of conflicting values that exist in economic development programs
D) The social and power relationships in which people are embedded
E) The orientation of an economy for trade and production
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What is a development tourist?

A) Someone who works as a development consultant and dispenses advice with little knowledge of local conditions
B) Someone who volunteers on development projects when on vacations abroad
C) Someone who develops commercial tourist opportunities in less developed countries
D) Someone who scouts development opportunities
E) Someone who works as a development consultant and dispenses advice with excellent knowledge of local conditions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The massive fires seen in 2019 in Brazil are emblematic of international development because:

A) Brazil is in the Global South
B) The native language of Brazil is not English
C) The fires reveal the extreme complexity of international development including issues of culture, climate, and politics
D) Brazil is the most powerful country in South America and exercises great influences over other countries in the region
E) The agricultural and industrial development model in Brazil is an example of efficiency and sustainability
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The study and practice of international development has as its goal:

A) To understand why so many people are poor and how to increase their economic power
B) To explain the diversity in the world with respect to human well-being
C) To eliminate global poverty by 2030
D) To spread democracy throughout the world
E) To establish neo-colonialism policies worldwide
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Labelling countries as "First World" or "Third World" can be problematic because:

A) Labels like these imply countries are on similar political and economic paths
B) Labels like these can be seen as pejorative
C) Labels like these can create neo-colonial attitudes on the part of First-World countries
D) Labels like these create dependencies on the part of the Third-World countries for things like aid and foreign assistance
E) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following is NOT typically seen as an emerging economy?

A) Thailand
B) India
C) South Africa
D) Taiwan
E) Singapore
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which of the following would NOT be a valid measure of national or international development?

A) Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
B) GINI Coefficient
C) Number of consumer durables in a country
D) Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
E) Gross National Income (GNI) per capita
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Social capital is:

A) a measure of how much individuals are willing to co-operate in the pursuit of shared goals
B) another term for GDP
C) a measure of civil unrest in a society
D) a measure of how many people participate in social activities in a given community
E) a measure of how many people are excluded from social activities in a given community
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Amartya Sen's Capability Model for analyzing development was critical because it showed:

A) the importance of measures of development that go beyond GDP per capita
B) how poor countries cannot develop without democracy
C) how global climate change affected developing nations
D) that current models in international development are just examples of neo-colonialism
E) why people with relatively middle incomes could still have relatively high birth rates
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
In the context of international development, the term "development" is a contested idea because many believe:

A) it is a form of neo-colonialism
B) it legitimates the global expansion of capitalism
C) so-called developed countries benefit more from international development than the developing countries do
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The Millennium Development Goals were ground-breaking because:

A) they emerged in 2000 thus heralding a new beginning
B) they focused on poverty reduction, were simple, measurable, and had deadlines associated with them
C) they were developed through international consultations
D) they focused on democracy and human rights
E) they gave way to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) differed from the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in the following important ways:

A) the SDGs focus on inequality; climate change; and a global partnership with developing economies
B) the SDGs employed the principles of "leave no one behind"
C) the SDGs emphasized a holistic view of development rather than focusing on single issues like economics
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 97 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
In Truman's inaugural speech, he indicated underdevelopment was a threat to the entire world.
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37
Absolute poverty is defined by the World Bank as an income below US$3.20 per day.
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38
French demographer Alfred Sauvy used the term tiers monde ("Third World") to refer countries outside the Eastern and Western power blocs during the Cold War.
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39
The act of labeling is politically neutral.
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40
Gross domestic product (GDP) per capita is useful for measuring inequality.
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41
The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) emerged as a political bloc alternative to the Soviet and American superpowers.
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42
"Developing countries" are perceived as politically stable regimes.
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43
Libertarian philosophy argues that individual rights, especially to acquire and retain private property, are the central moral good.
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44
Positionality describes the way states are economically positioned toward one another.
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45
When GDP per capita reaches the level of a middle-income developing country, it is assumed industrialization has occurred.
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46
Relative poverty is defined as a type of poverty that threatens daily survival.
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47
The "Fourth World" originally referred to the internal colonization of Indigenous Peoples.
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48
The World Bank has classified countries into low-, middle-, and high-income groups as a means of determining their loan eligibility.
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49
The terms used to describe people, places, and processes within international development reflect the evolution of thinking about the relationship among nations.
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50
"Growth with equity" is a strategy that focuses on maximizing GDP growth with no concern for how that growth is distributed.
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51
Income inequality can be measured in two ways: by measuring the income of the different strata of the population and by using the Gini coefficient.
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52
More growth in an economy always leads to a reduction in poverty rates.
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53
The UN's Human Development Report is philosophically and intellectually in line with the World Bank's World Development Report.
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54
Cosmopolitan arguments suggest that justice does not need to be universal.
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55
Communitarianism assumes national borders have high moral importance.
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56
Accepting the concept of positionality means that the development practitioner has little need to reflect on their relative power position vis-à-vis individuals in local societies.
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57
The Human Development Index does not measure school enrolment rates.
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58
Denis Goulet's view that development should promote "life-sustenance" is an example of a multi-dimensional view of development.
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59
Thomas Pogge argues that an economic order should be seen as unjust if it causes human rights violations that could be avoided under a different set of institutions.
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60
Development ethics deals with, in part, how development practitioners and researchers should act.
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61
In 2019, the Amazon region saw fires burning at a rate not seen in decades. This was mostly because foreign mining interests wanted access to gold mines.
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62
The Paris Agreement on Climate Change was signed (but not ratified) in 2016.
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63
In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic forced developing and developed countries to shut down their economies, plunging the world into an economic and human well-being crisis.
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64
The study of international development aims to explain both the diversity evident in the world in relation to human well-being and the common patterns that emerge when comparing people, social groups, nations, economic and political systems, and regions of the world.
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65
Critical theorists have pointed out that labeling plays at least two important roles: labels make existing practices appear legitimate, and they also shape future policy-making.
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66
Harry Truman's 1949 speech is the first time a politician of that stature used the term "development." By development, Truman meant a single, overarching scale on which to compare nations' success or progress in relation to each other.
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67
The conception of a "Third World" was first developed by Amartya Sen.
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68
A country's gross domestic product (GDP) is a measure of how much money each person in the country makes in a year.
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69
Income inequality is an important concept to understand and measure because it has been shown to be an important constraint on development.
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70
According to Amartya Sen, many of the "unfreedoms" that people experience are really their own fault.
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71
How does international development explore the diversity in human well-being?
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72
What is absolute poverty? How does it differ from both moderate poverty and relative poverty?
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73
What are the strengths and weaknesses of the World Bank's approach to measuring development?
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74
What are the basic principles of the capabilities approach?
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75
What are the implications of the concept of "positionality" as it relates to development researchers and practitioners?
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76
What is the "distribution of income" and what impacts does it have on development?
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77
What is the significance of the term "growth with equity"?
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78
What are the two uses of the term "Fourth World"?
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79
What is the "Global South"?
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80
What is the libertarian view as it relates to wealth and poverty?
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