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20th Century
Comparative Politics
Political Behavior
Two Party System
American Government Unit 2 Study Guide – Flashcards 18 terms

Rosa Sloan
18 terms
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American Government Unit 2 Study Guide – Flashcards
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3 Types of Political Party Systems
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Multi-Party System, Two party System, One party system
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Two Party System
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Compromise in which the two major parties find common ground. They work together to shape election laws in such a way that minor party/independent candidates have a harder time of winning
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Multi Party System
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Diverse representation, instability, power to govern must be shared by a number of parties in a coalition because it is hard to find a single majority
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One Political Party
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Literally only one political party. Dictatorship or a State that is run by one political party
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5 Functions of a Political Party
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1. Nominating Candidates 2. Informing and Activating Supporters 3. The bonding agent function (ensure the good performance of its candidates and officeholders. When choosing a candidate a party must make sure that they are not only qualified for the position but also has a good personality and reputation.) 4. Governing 5. The Watchdog Function (Watchdog over the conduction of the public's business...usually the job of the party NOT In power...they criticize the party in power and try to throw out the party in power.)
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Chronology of Two Party System
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Era of Democrats (Thomas Jefferson elected), Era of the Republicans (Civil War), Return of the Democrats (Great Depression and FDR), Era of Divided Government (Nixon)
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4 Typers of Minor Parties
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Ideological parties Single-issue parties Economic protest parties Splinter Parties
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Ideological Parties
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Based on a particular set of beliefs
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Single-Issue Parties
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focused on one public policy matter
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Economic Protest Parties
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rooted in periods of economic discontent, focus anger on real or imagined enemies such as the monetary system, wall street, railroads, or foreign imports
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Splinter Parties
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Parties that have split away from major parties
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2 Party System dominates US Political System
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Federalism is a major reason for the decentralized nature of the two major political parties. Party's main goal is to win elected offices. In federal system, offices are widely distributed over the national, State, and local levels. Because the governmental system is decentralized, so too are the major parties that serve it.
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Multi Party Systems are unstable
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Produce a broader representation of the electorate. That strength is also a weakness, because it leads to instability. One party is not as able to win the support of the majority of voters because the parties are smaller, therefore the power must be shared between different groups in the coalition.
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PACs
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$5000 to candidates/election cycle $15,000 to each political party/year $5000 to other PACs/year -seek to affect the making of public policy, can only raise money from their members (executives, employees, and stockholders of a corporation) unless they are unconnected in which case they can raise money from the public, can give $5000 per candidate but no overall limit -Controversial lobbying activities, exert too much influence on the government
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SuperPAC
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free from spending/fundraising limits, as long as they don't coordinate/contribute to the candidates themselves (after Supreme court ruling struck down bipartisan campaign reform act that regulated independent corporate campaign spending) -can directly advocate/oppose specific candidates
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527's
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tax-exempt interest groups that raise money to publicize/ gather support for political issues, unlimited contributions -evade many of the restrictions placed upon lobbyists through the 1995 lobbying disclosure act, and on soft money through the bipartisan campaign reform act -many candidates organize their own 527 groups to provide unlimited funding for issues they support
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FEC
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Federal Election Committee that administers and enforces the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA) - the statute that governs the financing of federal elections
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Voter Qualifications
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Age, Citizen, Registering, Residence
AP Government
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Comparative Politics
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Political Science
US/AZ Government Unit 1 Study Guide – Flashcards 55 terms

Jennifer Hawkins
55 terms
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US/AZ Government Unit 1 Study Guide – Flashcards
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Characteristics of a Modern State
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Population, Territory, Sovereignty, Government
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Theories of the Origin of the State
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Population: clearly, a state must have people - a population. The size of that population, however, has nothing to do with the existence of a state. Territory: just as a state cannot exist without people, so it must have land - territory, with known and recognized boundaries. The state's in today's world vary as widely in terms of territory as they do in population. Sovereignty: it has supreme and absolute power within its own territory and can decide its own foreign and domestic policies. It is neither subordinate nor responsible to any other authority. Thus, as a sovereign state, the U.S. can determine its form of government. Like any other state in the world, it can frame its economic system and shape its own foreign policies. Government: every state has a government. Recall, a government is the institution through which society makes and enforces its public policies. A government is the agency through which the state exerts its will and works to accomplish its goals. Government includes the machinery and the personnel by which the state is ruled.
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Duties of Government
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Governments around the world hold their citizens responsible for many things, such as paying taxes, serving in the military or at least cooperating with the law. But most people expect something in return, and the law itself often assigns duties and responsibilities to them. Citizens who understand these duties are in the best position to hold their governments accountable.
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Forms of Government
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Monarchy: state ruled over by a single person, as a king or queen: succession usually hereditary Oligarchy: a system of government in which a small group holds power Aristocracy: A government in which power is in the hands of a hereditary ruling class or nobility. Democracy: Government by the people, exercised either directly or through elected representative Tyranny: government based on absolute power or cruelty
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Principles of American Democracy
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Worth of individual, Rule of Law, Majority rule, Minority rights; Compromise, Citizen Participation
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English Foundations of American Rights
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Magna Carta Petition of Right (1628) English Bill of Rights (1689) Charter colony Royal colonies Proprietary colonies First Constitutional Congress Second Continental Congress Lexington and Concord Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation Constitutional Convention of 1787 Virginia Plan New Jersey Plan Connecticut Compromise Federalists Anti-Federalists
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Coming of Independence
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1754 Albany plan 1754-1763 french and indian war 1760 George III was throned 1765 stamp act 1765 stamp act repealed 1770 boston massacre 1772 committees of correspondence Dec 16 1773 Boston tea party 1774 intolerable acts Sept. 5 1774- oct. 26 1774 1st continental congress Apr. 19 1775 revolutionary war starts May 10 1775 second continental congress Jan 1776 New Hampshire adopted a written constitution July 1776 Declaration of independence written 1776-1777 most states adopt a written constitution Mar. 1 1781 articles of confederation written oct.1781 revolutionary war- fighting ends 1783 treaty of paris signed may- sept. 1787 constitution written sept. 17 1787 constitution signed 1789 constitution goes into effect
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Creating the Constitution: Federalists v. Anti-Federalists
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Federalists: wanted a stronger national government and who favored ratification of the constitution. Anti-Federalists: were opposed to the development of a strong national government and who opposed ratification of the constitution preferring that power remain in the hands of state and local governments.
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Articles of the Constitution
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Legislative Department, Executive Department, Judicial Department, Relations Among States, Provisions for Amendment, National Debts, Supremacy of National Law, Oath; Ratification of Constitution
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Bill of Rights
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The first ten amendments to the constitution
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Population
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Clearly, a state must have people
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Territory
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Just as a state cannot exist without people, so is must have land, with known and recognized boundaries.
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Government
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The institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies
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Sovereignty
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Having supreme power within its own territory; neither subordinate nor responsible to any other authority.
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Unitary
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A centralized government in which all government powers belong to a single, central agency
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Confederate
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A joining of several groups for a common purpose.
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Federal
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A form of government in which powers are divided between a central government and several local governments.
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Autocracy
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A form of government in which a single person holds unlimited political power.
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Oligarchy
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A form of government in which the power to rule is held by a small, usually self-appointed elite
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Democracy
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A form of government in which the supreme authority rests with the people.
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Rule by Law
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Concept that holds that government and it's officers are always subject to the law.
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Magma Carta
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Great Charter forced upon King John of England by his barons in 1215; established that the power of the monarchy was not absolute and guaranteed trial by jury and due process of law to the nobility.
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English Bill of Rights
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Document written by Parliament and agreed on by William and Mary of England in 1689, designed to prevent abuse of power by English monarchs; forms the basis for much in American government and politics today.
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French and Indian War
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A series of military engagements between Britain and France in North America between 1754 and 1763. The war was the American phase of the Seven Years' War, which was then underway in Europe. In a battle between British and French forces near Quebec City in Canada, the British gained control of all of Canada.
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Stamp Act
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1765: That law required the use of tax stamps on all legal documents, on certain business agreements, and on newspapers.
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Boston Tea Party
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December 16, 1773: a group of men, disguised as Native Americans, boarded three tea ships in Boston harbor and dumped the cargo into the sea to protest British control of the tea trade.
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Intolerable Acts
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Spring of 1774: prompted widespread calls for a meeting of all the colonies.
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Declaration of Independence
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On July 2, the final break came. The delegates agreed to Lee's resolution - but only after spirited debate, for many of the delegates has serious doubts about the wisdom of a complete separation from England. Two days later, on July 4, 1776, they adopted the declaration, proclaiming the existence of the new nation.
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Principles of the Constitution
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Popular sovereignty: tule by the people. Comes from preamble. Republicanism: a form of government in which people elect representatives to create and enforce laws. Federalism: division of power between the national and state governments. Separation of powers: dividing the powers of government among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches. Checks and balances: a system that allows each branch of government to limit the powers of the other branches in order to prevent abuse of power. Limited government: groups/individuals cannot bypass the law to serve their own interests. Individual rights: people have the right to peacefully ask the gov't to change a problem or to make a new law.
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Amendment Process (formal)
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An amendment may be proposed in one of two ways: by a two-thirds in each house of Congress, or by a national convention called by Congress at the request of two-thirds of the State legislatures. A proposed amendment may be ratified in one of two ways: by three-fourths of the State legislatures, or by three-fourths of the States in conventions called for that purpose. Congress has the power to determine the method by which a proposed amendment may be ratified. This process cannot be used to deny any State its equal representation in the United States Senate.
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Informal Amendments
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Process by which over time many changes have been made in the Constitution which have not involved any charges in its written words.
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Division of Powers
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Basic principle of federalism; the constitutional provisions by which governmental powers are divided on a geographic basis (in the United States, between the National Government and the States).
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Duties of Federal Government
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Make Laws, National Economy, National Security, Foreign Policy
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Admitting New States
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Only Congress has the power to admit new States to the Union. As part of the National Government's guarantee of respect for each State's territorial integrity, the Constitution places only one restriction on that power. A new State cannot be created by taking territory from one or more of the existing States without the consent of the legislature(s) of the State(s) involved.
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State Responsibilities
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Before finally admitting a new State, Congress has often set certain conditions. Each State enters the Union on an equal footing with each of the other States. Thus, although Congress can set certain conditions like those just described, it cannot impose conditions of a political nature on the States. But the Court also held that the conditions cannot be enforced when they compromise the independence of a State to manage its own internal affairs.
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Commerce Clause
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Gives Congress the power to regulate both foreign and interstate trade. Much of what Congress does, it does on the basis of its power.
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Judicial review
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The power of a court to determine the constitutionality of a governmental action.
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Federalism
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A system of government in which a written constitution divides power between a central, or national, government and several regional governments
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Delegated powers
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Those powers, expressed, implied, or inherent, granted to the National Government by the Constitution
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Expressed powers
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Those delegated powers of the National Government that are spelled out, expressly, in the Constitution; also called the "enumerated powers."
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Implied powers
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Those delegated powers of the National Government that are suggested by the expressed powers set out in the Constitution; those "necessary and proper" to carry out the expressed power
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Elastic clause
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(Necessary and Proper Clause) because, over time, it has been stretched to cover so many situations.
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McCulloch vs. Maryland
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(1819) Called the "Bank of the United States" case. A Maryland law required federally chartered banks to use only a special paper to print paper money, which amounted to a tax. James McCulloch, the cashier of the Baltimore branch of the bank, refused to use the paper, claiming that States could not tax the Federal Government. The Court declared the Maryland law unconstitutional, commenting "... the power to tax implies the power to destroy."
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Bill of Attainder
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A legislative act that inflicts punishment without a court trial.
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Writ of Habeas Corpus
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A court order which prevents unjust arrests and imprisionments.
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Ex post facto
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A law that retroactively changes the legal consequences (or status) of actions that were committed, or relationships that existed, before the enactment of the law.
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Inherent powers
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Powers the Constitution is presumed to have delegated to the National Government because it is the government of a sovereign state within the world community.
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Supremacy Clause
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It has been called the "linchpin of the Constitution" because it joins the National Government and the States into a single governmental unit, a federal government. In other words, it holds together the complex structure that is the American federal system.
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Apportionment
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The number of representatives each State is entitled to is based on its population, which is counted every 10 years in the census. Congress reap portions the seats among the States after each census. In the Reapportion Act of 1929, Congress fixed the permanent size of the House at 435 members with each State having at least one representative. Today there is one House seat for approximately every 650,000 persons in the population.
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Gibbons vs. Ogden
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(1824) This decision involved a careful examination of the power of Congress to "regulate interstate commerce." Aaron Ogden's exclusive New York ferry license gave him the right to operate steamboats to and from New York. He said that Thomas Gibbon's federal "coasting license" did not include "landing rights" in New York City. The Court invalidated the New York licensing regulations, holding that federal regulations should take precedence under the Supremacy Clause. The decision strengthened the power of the United States to regulate any interstate business relationship. Federal regulation of the broadcasting industry, oil pipelines, and banking are all based on Gibbons.
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Civil Rights Act of 1964
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A federal law that authorized federal action against segregation in public accommodations, public facilities, and employment. The law was passed during a period of great strength for the civil right movement, and President Lyndon Johnson persuaded many reluctant member of Congress to support the law.
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Grant-in-aid
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Grants of federal money or other resources to States, cities, countries, and other local units.
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Categorical grant
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One type of federal grant-in-aid; made for some specific, closely defined, purpose
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Block grant
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One type of federal grant-in-aid for some particular but broadly defined area of public policy
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Revenue sharing
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Form of federal monetary aid under which Congress gave a share of federal tax revenue, with virtually no restrictions, to the States, cities, countries, and townships.
A Level History
AP Comparative Government And Politics
AP Government
Comparative Politics
Live Below The Poverty Line
New Business Opportunities
Political Party System
AP Comparative Government Chapter 4: Russia – Flashcards 162 terms

Anthony Richie
162 terms
Preview
AP Comparative Government Chapter 4: Russia – Flashcards
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Soviet Union collapsed, reverberations heard around the world, left the Russian federation as the largest piece
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1991
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former member of the Soviet Politburo who declared the end of the old Soviet-style regime, first president of Russian Federation, shock therapy, uneven leader who used authoritarian rule, small group of family members
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Boris Yeltsin
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reforms put in place by Boris Yeltsin that pointed the country in the direction of democracy and free-market economy
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Shock Therapy
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form of government in which a few people have the power, Yeltsin created one using family
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Oligarchy
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elected two times, often acted aggressively in containing oligarchs' political and economic powers, increased centralization of powers, stepped down after two terms honoring Constitution of 1993, more conservative than Yeltsin
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Vladimir Putin
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Putin's successor, hand-picked
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Dmitri Medvedev
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a small group of men who climbed the ranks of the party
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Politburo
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an ordered path from local party soviets to the commanding heights of leadership
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Nomenklatura
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was at low ebb in beginning of 21st century, regime change, drastic departure from past hurt, Putin has stabilized it with his election, smooth transitions from president to president had added to it
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Legitimacy
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strong, autocratic leaders of Russia, large legitimacy
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Tsars
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communist rule that provided the legitimacy base for the party
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Marxism-Leninism
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rule by a few instead of the many, "vanguard" rulers, proposed by Lenin
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Democratic Centralism
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more of a totalitarian ruler, more complete, invasive form of strong-man rule than the tsars ever were
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Stalinism
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provided for a strong president, although the power was checked by popular election and lower house of legislature, required referendum of people to endorse it
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Constitution of 1993
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lower house of the legislature, had actually existed during 19th century
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Duma
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absolute power defended with brutality and force, based on geography because Huns, Vikings, Mongols would conquer them, Russians needed firm, unchallenged leaders
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Absolute, Centralized Rule
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numerous invasions meant different cultures, rapidly expanding borders stretched the empire to include more and more people, constant state of change with ethnicity, borders impossible to draw
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Extensive Cultural Heterogeneity
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reflects the diversity, with countless "republics" and "autonomous regions" based on ethnicity
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Russian Federation
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"lover of Slaves", led to a pride in Slavic customs, language, religion, history, led Russia to resist outside influence
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Slavophile
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wanted to "modernize" Russia with a stronger army, navy, roads, communication, "Window on the West", intrigued by the west, learned shipbuilding, brought engineers, carpenters, etc.
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Peter the Great
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St. Petersburg, a city built on newly conquered lands near Baltic Sea
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Window on the West
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followed Peter the Great and his efforts, led to a major empire, set in place a conflict, managed to gain access to Black Sea, was interested in Enlightenment development
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Catherine the Great
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challenged the traditional views of Russians
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George Kennan
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seized power and renamed the country Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
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Bolsheviks
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USSR
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Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
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communist leaders under Lenin replaced the tsars, ruled according to socialist principles, leaning toward absolute, centralized rule, old social classes swept away, tried to blend westernization with Slavophile
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Revolutions
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Russia is largest country in world, many different climates and ethnicities, borders touch many nations, coldest on earth, desire to conquer countries that have blocked access to sea, oil, gas, timber
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Geographic Setting
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Russians traded with Constantinople, adopting their religion, Russia did not share values of European Renaissance, Reformation, Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment, came to value strong state
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Eastern Orthodoxy
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The idea that the rights of the nation are supreme over the rights of the individuals who make up the nation, no separation of church and state
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Statism
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spheres of privacy free from control of state, western idea
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Civil Society
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Communists instilled appreciation for equality, most resent differences in wealth, different from equality of opportunity, not conducive to capitalism
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Equality of Result
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the doctrine of the equality of mankind and the desirability of political and economic and social equality
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Egalitarianism
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Russian citizens are hostile to leadership, citizens have little faith in their political system, Putin has highest approval ratings, police have little in non-governmental agents
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Skepticism About Power
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new emphasis on freedom of speech and press, instituted by Gorbachev, received complaints from everyone
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Glasnost
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people characterize based on nationalities, discriminate based on stereotypes, admire Baltic people, disdain for Muslim-Turkic, passed laws discouraging people from settling in regions, anti-Semitism
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Importance of Nationality
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has had trouble with gradual and ordered change, tendency to descend into chaos or revolution, tsars understood dangers of chaos in Russia, resorted to force, had to keep out Renaissance ideas, gradual attempts at industrialization ended in assassination, Five-ear Plans were successful
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Troubles with Gradual Change
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freed Russian serfs and experimented with local assemblies, assassinated in 1881, seriously sponsored reform
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Alexander II
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14th century to 20th century rule, control was passed through the Romanov family, transitions were accompanied by brutality
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Autocratic Rule by Tsars
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20th century, V.I. Lenin seized control after Nicholas II, regime toppled in 1991
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Communist Party Rule
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Yeltsin put in western-style reforms in place, procedural democracy, free market in 1991
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Change to Democracy
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first tsars were princes of Moscow, cooperated with Mongol rulers, were rewarded with power, when Mongols weakened, they declared themselves "tsars", autocratic and controlled land tightly, isolated as result, long distances separated it
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Tsarist rule
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headed by the tsars
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Russian Orthodox Church
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one who rules absolutely, with clear goals for the country in mind, Catherine and Peter the Great
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Enlightened Despot
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Russia brought into contact with West when Napoleon invaded, Alexander I resisted, Western thought influenced Russian intellectuals, no rooms for politics under tsars, tsars sent secret police to investigate and exile the critics
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19th Century Tsars
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resulted from intellectuals' frustration with absolute rule; ruthlessly crushed by many of Nicholas I
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Decembrist Revolt of 1825
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Russia defeated in this war, convinced many of tsar's critics that Russian ways were backwards and in need of reform
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Crimean War
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assemblies, local ones set up by Alexander II
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Zemstvas
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an educated and intellectual elite
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Intelligentsia
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son of Alexander II, undid many reforms of his father, intensified efforts of secret police
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Alexander III
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Russia's ineffectiveness in fighting Russo-Japanese War, World War I, Nicolas was in wrong place at wrong time, weak ruler with no control over his armies
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Cause of Revolution of 1917
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ruler of Russia who was deposed during the Revolution, weak ruler who had no control over his armies
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Nicholas II
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predicted socialist revolutions would take place first in nations like Germany, France and England
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Marxism
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VI Lenin's pamphlet, argued for democratic centralism, vanguard leadership that would lead the revolution, believed revolution could occur because of terrible conditions
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What Is To Be Done?
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led by Russian military leaders and funded by Allied Powers
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White Army
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army led by Lenin, winning side
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Red Army
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instituted by Lenin, allowed a great deal of private ownership to exist under a centralized leadership, brought prosperity to farmers, non industrialization
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New Economic Policy
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drastically changed Lenin's democratic centralism, Communist Party at center of control, no other political parties, 7% were members, ran all governments
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Joseph Stalin
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the process of party members selecting promising recruits from lower levels
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Nomenklatura
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most important top government officials, a group of 300 party leaders that met twice a year
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Central Committee
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above the Central Committee, heart and soul of Communist party, twelve men who ran the country, decisions carried out by government agencies and department
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Politburo
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head of the Politburo, assumed full power as dictator of county
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General Secretary
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state run farms, more effectively, did away with private land ownership, farms were intended to feed workers in the cities who contributed to industrilaization
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Collectivization
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peasants who resisted that owned large farms, were forced to move to cities or labor camps
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Kulaks
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Stalin's economic plans, set ambitious goals for production of oil, steel, electricity
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Five Year Plan
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the Central State Planning Commission, became nerve center for the economy, determined production and distribution of all goods in the Soviet Union
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Gosplan
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the two-pronged program of collectivization and industrialization carried out be central planning and executed with force and brutality
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Stalinism
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primary goal was internal development, advocated "socialism in one country", tried to ignore fascist threats, signed non-aggression pact with Germany in 1939, attacked by Germany following year, joined sides with allies, tensions at conferences escalated to Cold War
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Stalin's Foreign Policy
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execution of millions of citizens, up to one million party members, became obsessed with disloyalty in party ranks, ordered execution of his own generals, held total power, many speculated he had gone made by the end
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Purges
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chose as party secretary and premier, gave famous secret speech, DeStalinization, criticized for his reforms and diplomatic failure in Cuban Missile Crisis
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Nikita Khrushchev
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Khrushchev revealed existence of a letter written by Lenin before he died, critical of Stalin, used it to denounce his practices
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Secret Speech
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a process that led to reforms such as loosening government censorship of press, decentralization of economic decision-making, restructuring of collective farms
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DeStalinization
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relaxation of tensions between US and Soviet Union
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Peaceful Coexistence
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replaced Khrushchev, much more conservative, ended reforms and tried to cope with increased economic power
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Leonid Brezhnev
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replaced Brezhnev, unlike any Soviet leader before, acted "western', open to many reforms, inherited many problems, three-pronged program (Glasnost, Democratization, Perestroika)
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Mikhail Gorbachev
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"openness", allowed more discussion of political, social, and economic issues as well as criticism of government, caused many problems for Gorbachev, people vented hostility toward government, caused open revolt
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Glasnost
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believed he could keep Old Soviet structure with more democracy, new Congress of People's deputies, new position of President
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Democratization
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economic reform, most radical, least successful, tried to keep old structure and modernize it, transferred economic power to private hands, authorization of privately owned companies, penalties for under-performing factories, etc.
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Perestroika
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1991 "conservatives" from within Politburo led coup d'etat that tried to remove Gorbachev, failed when popular protests broke out, soldiers defected, protesters led by Boris Yeltsin, December 1991 11 republics had declared independence, Gorbachev forced to announce end of Union
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Failed Coup
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created a three-branch government, with a president, prime minister, lower legislative house called the Duma, and a Constitutional Court
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Constitution of 1993
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many are affected by contradictory influences from their political culture, say they support democratic government although they do not believe one exists, like the idea of strong state, etc.
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Citizens
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nationality, social class, rural/urban divisions
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Cleavages
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80% are Russian, others include Tatars, Ukrainians, Armenians, Chuvashes, etc., determine organization of country into "federation", "autonomous regions", many would like their independence, nationalists have take to kidnappings, suicide bombings, xenophobic attacks in Russia, fatal school of soccer fan, etc., "Russians for Russians"
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Nationality
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a primarily Muslim region that has fought for years for its freedom, Russia has had considerable difficulty keeping Chechnya a part of Russia, involved in terrorist acts, referendum to gain legitimacy for Russian government in Chechnya
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Chechnya
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former rebel, became president of Chechnya in 2007, fighting has not stopped, endorsed by Putin
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Ramzan Kadyrov
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Tsarist Russia was overwhelmingly Russian Orthodox, tsar served as spiritual head of state, Soviet Union prohibited religious practices of all kinds, citizens lost their religious affiliations, LARGELY NON-RELIGIOUS, Moscow contains ultimately authority in church matters
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Religion
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had split after Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, vowing never to return as long as the "godless regime" was in power, reunited with Russian Orthodox Church
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Russian Church Abroad
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Moscow has large population who are laborers, Caucasus seen as a hot spot of trouble, problems with Chechnya made it had for Putin to cultivate relationship, Bashkortostan and Tatarstan had calmer relationships
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Muslim Concentration
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president of Tatarstan, accompanied Putin around Middle East in restructuring Russia's image of Muslim
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Mintimer Shaimiev
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Soviet attempts to destroy class differences were successful, noble/peasant difference no longer exists, but Party and non-Party members made new cleavage, economic favors granted to those in power, however egalitarian views and nomenklatura didn't take background into account
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Social Class
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people who have recently amassed fortunes from new business opportunities, many survived and new opportunities are emerging, Putin era took aim at any who didn't pay taxes
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New Entrepreneur Class
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industrialization has led to increasing urban population, divide between them is wide, city dwellers are more educated, in touch with west, etc.
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Rural/Urban Cleavages
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predicted the demise of Capitalist West, belief fed into Russian nationalism and supported the notion that the Russian government and way of life would prevail
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Marxism
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information about people's views is scarce, people are alienated from political system, people support democratic ideals, including free elections and civil liberties, do not believe government can create these things,
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Mistrust of Government
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Russians expect the state to take an active role in their lives, citizens function more as subjects than participants, expect great deal from government
answer
Statism
question
nearly all parties support market transition, privatization and limited government regulation is rapid market reform, "shock therapy"
answer
Economic Beliefs
question
Slavophile vs. Westernizer, some parties emphasis nationalism and defense of Russian interests, etc.
answer
Westernization
question
Russians did vote in 20th century, but elections were not competitive until Gorbachev, still noncompetitive because it was choice between official candidate and alternate
answer
Voting
question
many criticized government's economic policies that led to sinking, Vladivostok, 1000 protesters marched through the streets, police riots, etc.
answer
Political Protest
question
since 1991 turnout has been highest than in the United States, presidential elections has been higher than Duma elections, etc.
answer
Voter Turnout
question
private organizations and associations outside of politics, leas to low political participation, Russians don't attend church, belong to clubs, etc., 1% belong to political party, however appears to be growing, emerged as result of glasnost on issues like environment, ethnicity, gender, human rights, etc.
answer
Civil Society
question
state-sponsored organizations in this arrangement with the government because Soviet authorities argued that only the party could and should represent the people's interest
answer
State Corporatism
question
Russia's largest youth movement, organized mass marches in support of Putin, laid siege to Estonian embassy
answer
Nashi
question
Nashi, Youth Guard, Locals, all are in effort to build a following of loyal, patriotic young people, defuse resistance
answer
Youth Groups
question
youth wing of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
answer
Komsomol
question
89 regions, each bound by treaty to the Federation, most regions are called "Republics", many ruled themselves independently, authoritarian,
answer
Federal Government Structure
question
some regions are much stronger than others
answer
Asymmetric Federalism
question
seven new federal districts encompassing all of Russia, each headed by a presidential appointee
answer
Super-Districts
question
a law allowing the president to remove from office a governor who refuses to subject local law to national constitution
answer
Removal of Governors
question
measure ending direct election of regional governors, president would elect governors and local legislatures would confirm
answer
Appointment of Governors
question
upper legislative house, change prohibited governors and Duma heads from serving themselves
answer
Federation Council
question
Putin initiated change to pure proportional representation electoral system
answer
Elimination of Single-Member District Seats
question
very weak, situation which undermines recent attempts to establish a democracy, political parties were unstable, no solid footing for interest groups
answer
Linkage Institutions
question
Russia has had to put them together overnight, small factional ones, 43 on ballot in 1995, revolved around specific leaders, others reflected a particular group, 26 in 1999, but mostly new ones, no time to develop party loyalties, personalistic rule, new rules shrank number
answer
Parties
question
proportional representation requires all parties to win at least 7% of national vote to win any seats
answer
Change in Voting Rules
question
formed in April 2001 between Fatherland All-Russia Party and Unity Party, intended to support Putin in presidential election, won 221 seats in 2004, gained 64$ of vote in 2007, hard to define ideologically, PRO-PUTIN
answer
United Russia
question
second strongest party, even though never won a presidential election, far less reformist than other parties, opposed many reforms, continues to support stability of old regime, centralized planning and nationalism
answer
Communist Party of Russian Federation
question
CPRF leader, came in second in 1996 and 2000 presidential elections
answer
Gennady Zyuganov
question
most controversial party, headed by Vladimir Zhirinovsky, made headlines for extreme nationalist positions, attacks reformists, implied he would use nuclear weapons on Japan, anti-Semitic remarks, sexist comments, etc.
answer
Liberal Democrats
question
formed in 2006, formed from many organizations, gained 38 seats in Duma
answer
A Just Russia
question
managed to win 8% of vote in regional elections in 2011, came in third, Kremlin product, "statists" and "patriots" aiming to build "great and prosperous" Russia, foil the Communist Party and Just Russia
answer
Patriots of Russia
question
parties strongly sponsored by economic and political power-holders, less ideological
answer
Parties of Power
question
president could call for one by popular vote on important issues, Yeltsin called for one on his job performance, later held in favor of new Constitution, vote to approve Chechnyan Constitution
answer
Referendum
question
five different times, 450 seats, all seats now assigned by proportional representation, eliminated "against all" option as well, must get at least 7% of national vote to gain any seats
answer
Duma Elections
question
two-round model that Duma has, some questioned honesty of elections, media clearly favored both candidates who won, law restricted right of small parties to run presidential candidates
answer
Presidential Elections
question
only allowed under state corporatism in Soviet Union , controlled by government, state-owned industries were bought by insiders after collapse of Soviet Union, collection of oligarchs were major interest group
answer
Interest Groups
question
group of wealth insiders who bought state-owned industries after collapse of Soviet Union, monopolized Yeltsin and took control of largest industries, Putin showed resistance, clashed with entrepreneurs, economic climate has weakened the oligarchs
answer
Oligarchy
question
best known oligarch, he and six others control half of Russia's GNP, used media to ensure Yeltsin's reelection
answer
Boris Berezovsky
question
richest man in Russia, CEO of Yukos Oil Company, arrested as signal from Putin the government was consolidating power
answer
Mikhail Khodorvsky
question
state determines which groups have input into policy-making, vast state-owned holding companies in automobile and aircraft industries, etc., government has forced companies who are too independent of government to sell
answer
State Corporatism
question
either government-controlled companies or companies run by men seen as loyal to Mr. Putin
answer
Insider Privatization
question
controls more than under-world crime, control local businesses, natural resources, banks, thrive on protection money, laundering, deals with Russian governments, murder bankers, journalists, etc.
answer
Russian Mafia
question
Pravda only printed what government officials wanted it to, continued as independent newspaper later on, little to fear from official censorship, biggest stories focus on celebrities, etc., reports for serious journalists are tough, criticizing the government, clearly doesn't have freedom of the press, DON'T CRITICIZE THE GOVERNMENT
answer
Russian Media
question
official newspaper of the Soviet Union, reinvented itself as a tabloid, little to fear from official censorship because of investigative journalism, etc.
answer
Pravda
question
only independent television network, Kremlin took it over, tried to play honest reporting, was ousted by the government, correspondent died
answer
NTV
question
shows freedom of press, most networks didn't even cover it, NTV didn't show up until late, etc.
answer
Beslan School Seizure
question
hybrid of presidential and parliamentary systems, meant to allow for a strong presidency, but still allow some democratic checks on executive power, branches have stabilized but it's too soon to tell whether it will be successful
answer
Semi-Presidential System
question
separates the head of state and head of government
answer
Executive Branch
question
the president, has been far from ceremonial, came to dominate the prime minister under Putin, elected for four-year (six year in 2012), limit of two terms, anyone who gets a million signatures can run
answer
Head of State
question
prime minister, dominated by president
answer
Head of Government
question
Duma must approve it, but if they reject it three times, president may dissolve them, Putin was prime minister when he ran for president, appointed Kasyanov
answer
Appoint Prime Minister and Cabinet
question
have force of law, cabinet has a great deal of concentrated, centralized power, Duma has no power to censure cabinet, created United Aircraft Corporation
answer
Issue Decrees
question
the president can get rid of the Parliament, can order the army to fire on the building until the members give up,
answer
Dissolve the Duma
question
takes over in case of presidential death or resignation, not leader of majority party, instead have much expertise as result of work in bureaucracy
answer
Prime Minister
question
Russian legislature has proved to be weak check on executive, Duma and Federation Council
answer
Bicameral Legislature
question
lower house with 450 deputies, passes bills, approves budget, confirms president's appointments, very limited powers, impeachment process is cumbersome
answer
Duma
question
consists of two members from each of 89 federal administrative units, one representative is selected by the governor of each region and another by regional legislature, represents regions, not populations, has main power of delaying legislation, can change boundaries among republics, ratify use of armed force, appoint new judges
answer
Federation Council
question
nineteen members, appointed by president, confirmed by Federation Council, moved to St. Petersburg away from political influence, POWER TO CHALLENGE CONSTITUTIONALITY, suffers from lack of legal training
answer
Constitutional Court
question
created to serve as final court of appeals in criminal and civil cases, does not have power to challenge constitutionality of laws and political actions
answer
Supreme Court
question
attempted to revive period of law reform, including jury trial, procedural code for criminal and civil rights, great deal of money on reform, Putin's impact on courts was unacceptable to Clinton
answer
Putin's Law Reforms
question
State Security Committee
answer
KGB
question
state and society have been pushed away from law by corruption, allowing police to continue to operate autonomously, security police are generally least corrupt, puts drag on economic development because so much money is siphoned off for bribes
answer
Role of Corruption
question
Soviet government paid for this ahead of everything, 4 million men, did not take lead in politics, shows no sign of becoming a political force, suffered military humiliation, soldiers go unpaid and supply own food
answer
Military
question
prominent general, gained political following before election of 1996, military coup unlikely, Russian Air Force would assert old vigor by long-range patrols by nuclear-capable bombers again, move was seen by many as rise in strength by many in military again, military spending has increased
answer
Alexander Lebed
question
perestroika reforms never fully implemented, dissent within Politburo led to coup, "shock therapy" created chaotic conditions resulted in oligarchs running country, stock market toppled, government defaulted on loans, unemployment soared, ruple collapsed, new industries improved, standard of living rose, stimulus plan had very little effect, economy is run by oil and gas reserves, need to diversify
answer
The Economy
question
dominance of the world was broken, time of chaos and humiliation, relied on loans of US to gain economic footing
answer
Foreign Policy
question
unites the fifteen former republics of the Soviet Union, has little power over its members, Russia, trade agreements bind them, nationality issue divide them, Putin's involvement in elections in Ukraine was controversial, controversy in Estonia
answer
Confederation of Independent States
question
US emerged as only superpower, Bush and Clinton believed in working relationship with Russia, G-8 summits, aid packages for Russia, Russia is entering WTO, clout comes from oil and gas industries, terrorist attacks with 9/11 made tense the relationships between the nations
answer
Relations with West
question
a powerful body responsible for regulating international trade, settling trade disputes, and designing trade policy through meetings
answer
World Trade Organization
question
Belsan school siege, suicide bombing in Moscow, Putin argued tighter grip
answer
Terrorism
question
Russia has suffered dramatic drop in overall population, predicts 18% drop by 2050, low birth rate and poor health habits, alcohol-related death, life expectancy is low, government is encouraging Russians to return home, repatriation program, etc.
answer
Population Issues
question
Putin's party controls huge part of the Duma, government has controlled power of oligarchs, controls major television stations, Russian gas giant Gazprom, not clear whether it marks end of democracy or reaction to terrorism
answer
Re-Centralization of Power
question
a public life that is defined by government, private life in which people are free to make their own individual choices, do not share the idea of life, liberty, and property, became a superpower through strong central government
answer
Development of Civil Society
AP Comparative Government And Politics
Applied Sociology
Comparative Politics
Law And Order
Political Science
United States
Us Constitution
GPI Ch 2 – Flashcard 31 terms

Kenneth McQuaid
31 terms
Preview
GPI Ch 2 – Flashcard
question
an organization that maintains a monopoly of violence over a territory
answer
Political scientists, based on the work of Max Weber, define the state as:
question
states to carry out actions or policies independent of outside actors or internal rivals.
answer
Sovereignty is defined as the ability of:
question
the basic rules and norms of politics
answer
Regimes are defined as:
question
the leadership in charge of running the state.
answer
Government can be defined as
question
country
answer
The shorthand term for the combination of regime, state, and government is:
question
domesticated agriculture and sedentary living
answer
The first emergence of human specialization into inequality is tied to
question
pre-state societies were very violent.
answer
Recent research suggests that the rise of political organizations came about because:
question
Europe
answer
Where did the modern state first emerge?
question
legitimate
answer
An institution that is recognized and accepted as right and proper is seen as:
question
traditional, charismatic, and rational legal.
answer
Which of the following are named in the text as a basic form of political legitimacy?
question
habits and customs
answer
Traditional legitimacy rests on
question
territorial divisions are not very important within a country
answer
A unitary state can be defined as a system wherein
question
significant powers are devolved to regional bodies.
answer
Federalism can be defined as a system wherein:
question
autonomy; capacity
answer
State power is often analyzed in terms of _______ and ________.
question
high capacity but low autonomy
answer
The United States is often seen as having
question
wield power independent of the public
answer
State autonomy can be defined as the ability to
question
protection racket
answer
The state is often compared in many ways to a:
question
sovereignty
answer
The army and police both are part of a country's
question
written and unwritten elements
answer
Regimes are comprised of both
question
governments
answer
Which of the following is seen as weakly institutionalized?
question
The past few centuries
answer
States have been the dominant for of political organization for how long?
question
developed through coercion or consensus
answer
One major debate on the origins of political organization deals with whether early political groups
question
The collapse of the Roman Empire
answer
The emergence of the modern state is closely tied to what specific event?
question
constant warfare during the dark ages
answer
The development of the modern state in Europe was encouraged by
question
greater religious commitment to democracy
answer
In comparison to earlier forms of poltical organization, states often enjoyed all of the following advantages EXCEPT
question
rational legitimacy
answer
Modern states are built primarily on what form of legitimacy
question
traditional legitimacy
answer
The text suggests that the difficulty in amending the US Constitution is evidence of the power of
question
send power down to the local level
answer
Devolution is a process by which states
question
failed
answer
A state with an extremely low level of autonomy and capacity is known as a ________ state
question
fulfill basic tasks
answer
Strong states:
question
ability to wield power in order to carry out basic tasks.
answer
State Capacity can be defined as the
AP Comparative Government And Politics
Case Studies
Comparative Politics
Political Behavior
Unit 1 F16 – Flashcards 90 terms

Brenda Gannon
90 terms
Preview
Unit 1 F16 – Flashcards
question
An institution can be defined as any:
answer
organization or activity that is self-perpetuating and valued for its own sake
question
Politics is defined in the text as the:
answer
struggle in any group for the power to make decisions for the larger group
question
What is inductive reasoning?
answer
the means by which we from studying a case to generating a hypothesis
question
Which of the following could be considered a major challenge faced by political scientists in their use of the comparative method?
answer
the difficulty in controlling variables
question
Which of the following could be an example of selection bias?
answer
studying causes for the emergence of democracy by looking only at case studies where democracy emerged
question
Endogeneity refers to:
answer
the problem of distinguishing cause from effect
question
A major criticism of comparative politics at the turn of the twentieth century was that it:
answer
was descriptive rather than explanatory
question
Which of the following served as a major modern turning point for the study of comparative politics?
answer
the growth of European countries as colonial powers
question
Modernization theory can be defined as the view that:
answer
as societies develop, they will become capitalist democracies
question
The shift in comparative politics away from political institutions (such as legislature and constitutions) and toward individual political behavior is known as:
answer
behavioral revolution
question
One big rift within the study of comparative politics is:
answer
quantitative versus qualitative research
question
Which of the following statements about game theory is accurate:
answer
It assumes rational, predictable behavior by individual human beings
question
Recent discussions of the future of comparative politics and political science have called for:
answer
a greater connection to real-world concerns and contribution to the ideals of civic life
question
Which of the following is true of the concept of political institutions?
answer
U.S democracy is an institution in both formal and informal ways
question
A greater focus on individual freedom is most likely to require:
answer
a smaller state
question
A greater focus on collective equality is associated with:
answer
greater government control of private economic assets
question
The substance of politics is inevitably bound up in the struggle between:
answer
individual freedom and collective equality
question
Which of the following forms of research or date would more likely be used by an quantitative research study than a qualitative research study?
answer
economic data
question
In which of the following ways do quantitative research differ from qualitative research?
answer
If favors a wider use of cases not restricted by area specialization
question
In which of the following ways does behavioralism differ from modernization theory?
answer
It was more of a method than a general hypothesis
question
Political scientist, based on the work of Max Weber, define the state as:
answer
an organization that maintains a monopoly of violence over a territory
question
Sovereignty is defined as the ability of:
answer
states to carry out actions or policies within a territory independent of external actors of internal rivals
question
What phenomenon is most responsible for bring the organization of the modern state into adoption by most of the world?
answer
increased international commerce and trade
question
Which of the following can be said about the concept of a regime?
answer
The differences between regimes are most likely to be unwritten and informal, though they can appear in written constitutions
question
Thomas Hobbes believed that people gave up their rights to the coercive power of the state in order to:
answer
escape anarchy
question
Government can be defined as:
answer
the leadership that runs the state
question
The shorthand term for the combination of regime, state and government is:
answer
country
question
In which of the following ways does a government built primarily on charismatic legitimacy differ from on based on traditional legitimacy?
answer
Charismatic legitimacy would likely be much more short-lived
question
Which of the following can be said about the relationships among states, regimes, and governments?
answer
States are more institutional than governments
question
Asymmetric federalism refers to a system in which power is divided unevenly between:
answer
regional bodies
question
Recent research suggest that the rise of political organizations came about in large part because:
answer
pre-state societies were extremely violent
question
The emergence of the modern state is closely tied to which of the following specific developments?
answer
the collapse of the Roman Empire
question
Which of the following is most likely a reason for the emergence of the modern state in Europe rather than in another region
answer
the widespread collapse of law and civilization and the rise of a form of organized crime
question
The development of the modern state in Europe was partly encouraged by:
answer
linguistic and ethnic fragmentations
question
An institution that is recognized and accepted as right and proper by the public is seen as:
answer
legitimate
question
Which of the following list Max Weber's three forms of political legitimacy?
answer
traditional, charismatic, and rational-legal
question
Modern states are built primarily on what for of legitimacy?
answer
rational-legal
question
The text suggests that the difficulty of amending the U.S. constitution is evidence of the power of:
answer
traditional legitimacy
question
Which of the following characteristics is more likely to be seen in a unitary state than in a federalist state?
answer
limited local policymaking
question
Capacity can be defined as the:
answer
ability of the state to wield power in order to carry out the basic tasks of providing security and reconciling freedom and equality
question
Devolution is a process by which states:
answer
move power from the central state to local levels
question
Autonomy can be defined as the ability of a state to:
answer
wield power independent of the public or international actors
question
Which of the following best characterizes the nature of the conflict of recent years in Afghanistan?
answer
Ethnic
question
Why might the term patriotic fail to characterize the Palestinian people?
answer
Patriotism refers to pride in one's state, Palestinians lack a forma state
question
Ethnic identity can be defined as:
answer
a set of institutions that bind people together through a common culture
question
Which of the following concepts is held in common by both communist ideology and liberal and social democratic ideology but is lacking in fascist ideology?
answer
a belief in the potential of individuals
question
Ascription occurs when:
answer
a particular quality or characteristic is assigned at birth
question
Which of the following statements about fundamentalism is accurate?
answer
Fundamentalists seek to solve the problems of the modern world
question
Which of the following statements about ethnicity is accurate?
answer
Ethnic solidarity can lessen willingness to share resources with groups that are ethnically different
question
An institution that binds people together through common political aspirations is:
answer
national identity
question
In Ronald Inglehart's conception of political culture, what form of society stands in opposition to a traditional society?
answer
secular-rational
question
Which of the following is one of the two most important components of national identity?
answer
self-government
question
National Identity is:
answer
often derived from ethnic identity
question
Citizenship is best defined as:
answer
an individual's or a group's relation to the state
question
Political culture can be defined as:
answer
a society's norms for political activity
question
Which of the following statements about citizenship, national identity, and patriotism is accurate?
answer
Citizenship is likely to be more flexible than ethnic identity
question
Which of the following concepts has the most potential to be inclusive or flexible?
answer
citizenship
question
In which of the following ways do both conservatives and liberals differ from radicals?
answer
They do not see the need for change in the current system
question
A state that encompasses one dominant nation that is claims to embody and represent is known as:
answer
a nation-state
question
Which of the following concepts of phenomena was first and most directly connected to state development?
answer
growing ethnic identity
question
In which of the following ways does national conflict differ from ethnic conflict?
answer
National conflict has an independent state as a core goal; ethnic conflict does not
question
Political attitudes refers to views regarding:
answer
the necessary pace and scope of change in the balance between freedom and equality
question
Radicals are those in the political spectrum who favor:
answer
dramatic change of the existing order
question
Conservatives are those in the political spectrum who favor:
answer
Little or no change to existing institutions
question
Reactionaries are those in the political spectrum who favor:
answer
restoring structures and values that they believe once existed
question
A person following a liberal ideology would likely approve of:
answer
a low degree of state autonomy
question
______ are the most fundamental components of political economy.
answer
Markets and property
question
Markets can best be defined as:
answer
the interactions between the forces of supply and demands
question
In the United States, the government cannot take a citizen's property without just cause and compensation. This is an example of:
answer
a property right
question
Public goods are best defined as:
answer
goods, provided or secured by the state, that are available for society and indivisible
question
Which of the following would be considered a public good in the United States?
answer
highways
question
What is the oldest of the political-economic systems, and what system first rose to challenge it?
answer
mercantilism, first challenged by liberalism
question
In which of the following ways do bother communism and mercantilism differ from liberalism?
answer
They have high state autonomy and capacity
question
The total market value of all good and products produced in a year is known as:
answer
the gross domestic product
question
The _____ is in charge of regulating the supply of money in a country.
answer
central bank
question
Extremely tight control over the money supply may result in ______, a condition that has plagued Japan since 1998.
answer
deflation
question
What is a primary tactic used by central banks to combat inflation?
answer
raising interest rates
question
When governments print more money because they lack revenue, one result may be:
answer
hyperinflation
question
Taxes on imported goods are known as:
answer
tariffs
question
Restrictions that limit the quantities of foreign goods coming into a country are an example of:
answer
quotas
question
Since the major economic downturn of the last decade, on trend in the U.S, Canada, and Japan has been:
answer
a reverse or economic liberalization
question
Liberalism view of the relationship between freedom and equality favors:
answer
freedom over equality
question
Social democracy can be defined as a system that:
answer
attempts to balance freedom and equality
question
Over the past two decades, most countries around the world have:
answer
increased economic liberalization
question
Which of the following statements about neocorporatism is accurate?
answer
Neocorporatism involves a greater role for organized labor in economic policy than in the liberal model
question
Which political-economic system views private property as a form of exploitation?
answer
communism
question
The Gini index is one way that social scientist measure:
answer
the amount of economic inequality in a society
question
Mercantilism is best associated with which of the following policies?
answer
tariff barriers
question
Which political-economic system views the economy as an instrument to serve state power and national sovereignty?
answer
mercantilism
question
Purchasing power parity is a way to measure:
answer
the buying power of income across countries
Comparative Politics
East India Companies
Free And Fair Elections
Interests And Values
Play The Game
Trading Post Empire
chapter 20 part 2 – Flashcards 54 terms

Jose Escobar
54 terms
Preview
chapter 20 part 2 – Flashcards
question
What is Fascism? what did it want to do? what did it put? what did it emphasize?
answer
-Extreme form of nationalism -Wanted to mobilize people for a grand task -Put faith in a charismatic leader -Emphasized the power of the state
question
What did fascism condemn?
answer
-Condemned individualism, liberalism, feminism, parliamentary democracy, and communism
question
Why did fascism become popular for some?
answer
-People were disillusioned from the war -Some saw the rise of socialism and communism as a threat -People lost faith in liberal democracy and capitalism
question
How is the rise of Hitler and the Nazis similar to the rise of Mussolini and the fascists?
answer
-Liberal or democratic political leaders faced considerable hostility -People demanded decisive action from the state -Passionate opposition to communism -Other political parties were banned -Independent labor unions were ended -Thousands of opponents were arrested -Press and radio came under state control
question
How is the rise of Hitler and the Nazis different to the rise of Mussolini and the fascists?
answer
-Italy was not humiliated by the components of the Treaty of Versailles (had switched sides) -Had anti-semitism but nothing in comparison to Nazi Germany's overt anti-semitism
question
What did the Nazi party believe in?
answer
-Intense German nationalism -Racial superiority -Bitter hatred for Jews -Passionate opposition to communism -Determination to rescue Germany from the humiliating requirements of the Treaty of Versailles -Willingness to tackle the country's economic problems
question
What did Hitler establish control over once he was in power? what did he invest in?
answer
-Established firm control over German society -Invested in infrastructure projects
question
once hitler came to power, what did hitler consolidate? what did he outlaw? who were arrested?
answer
nazi control of germany, all other political parties were outlawed, his opponents
question
what did hitlers policies do to germany? what did he do to the military?
answer
brought them out of the depression, Rebuilt and re-armed the country's military forces
question
once hitler was in power what came under state control?
answer
press and radio
question
How did the Nazis reject the ideas of the Enlightenment?
answer
-Rationalism -Tolerance -Democracy -Human equality
question
How did the Nazis reflect the ideas of the Enlightenment?
answer
-The legacy of modern science -The concern to classify and rank various human groups -"Scientific racism" -Confidence in the perfectibility of humankind -The belief in social engineering
question
How is Japan similar to Germany and Italy?
answer
Newcomers to great power status, they had a rather limited experience with democratic politics, they Moved toward an authoritarian government and a denial of democracy at home during the 1930s Disliked Communism
question
How is Japan different to Germany and Italy?
answer
-Japan's participation in World War I was minimal -Its economy grew considerably as other industrial countries were engaged in the European war
question
How did the Great Depression affect Japan?: what impoverished millions of rural dwellers? what did many people begin to doubt? what movements were started? who were assassnated by whom? did a fascist party emerge? growth of ______ what did censorship limit? single _____
answer
-Shrinking world demand for silk impoverished millions of rural dwellers who raised silkworms -Many began to doubt the ability of parliamentary democracy and capitalism to address Japan's "national emergency" -Growing movements known as Radical nationalism or the Revolutionary Right -Members of such groups assassinated a number of public officials -No major fascist party emerged -Did not produce any charismatic leader like Mussolini or Hitler -The growth of right-wing nationalist thinking -Censorship limited free expression -Single news agency
question
How did the Japanese view themselves? How did they view citizens of Western countries?
answer
themselves: -An emperor of divine origin related to his subjects as a father to his children -Students now had to engage in more physical training Citizens of Western countries: -Conglomerations of separate individuals with no deep foundation between ruler and citizen to unite them
question
How did Japan emerge out of the Great Depression?
answer
-Rise of the military -State-financed credit -Large-scale spending on armaments -Public works projects -Japan emerged out of the Depression more rapidly and more fully than major Western countries -Government assumed a supervisory role -Gave subsidies to strategic industries -Profit ceilings on major corporations -Caps on wages, prices, and rents -Central planning -Private property was retained -Still less repressive and more pluralistic than fascist Italy or Nazi Germany
question
why and how dis japan emerge out of the great depression?
answer
-it began in Asia -Japanese imperial ambitions -Strong Japanese nationalism -Japanese military units seized Manchuria in 1931 and established a puppet state called Manchukuo -Japan left the League of Nations, broke politically with its Western allies, and in 1936 aligned itself more closely with Germany and Italy -Japan attacked China in 1937
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Why did the Japanese believe that their national survival was at stake?
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-Felt isolated, surrounded, and threatened -Felt like an unequal power with Britain and the United States -Felt European racism -Dependent on foreign and especially American sources of strategic goods -US was hostile to Japanese ambitions in Asia -Western powers controlled resource-rich colonies in Southeast Asia
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Why did Japan start the war?
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Either they could accept American terms which would reduce Japan to a 2nd or 3rd rank power or war with an uncertain outcome
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What were the causes of World War II in Europe?
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-Germans resented their country's position in the international arena since the Treaty of Versailles -German aggression -Britain, France, and the Soviet Union did not confront that aggression forcefully and collectively -A more deliberate and planned war than World War I -Hitler wanted more land (lebensraum= living space) in the east, Poland and Russia -This required war
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How did Hitler start the war?
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-1935- major rearmament program -1936- Entered the Rhineland (was demilitarized by the Treaty of Versailles) -1938- Germany annexed Austria and the German-speaking parts of Czechoslovakia -The British and the French appeased Hitler -1939- Hitler attacked Poland; this was the trigger for WWII -By 1941, most of Europe was under Nazi control
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How was World War II different from World War I?
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WWI: Trench warfare which emphasized defense, Total deaths= 10 million WWII: The German tactic of blitzkrieg (lightening war) coordinated the rapid movement of infantry, tanks, and airpower over very large areas/ Most destructive conflict in world history (total deaths- 60 million)/Many deaths were civilians/ Civilians were targets
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Who was hit the hardest by World War II? Why?
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The Soviet Union Accounted for more than 40 percent of the deaths (25 million)
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How did Japan affect China during World War II?
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-15 million deaths -Killing of every person and every animal in many villages -Rape of Nanjing (1937-1938)- 200,000-300,000 civilians were killed and often mutilated; countless women were sexually assaulted
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Total war
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-German bombing of British cities -Allied firebombing of Japanese and German cities -Dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki -Indiscriminate brutality worse than the horrors of World War I
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What was one of the most haunting outcomes of the war? Why?
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-6 million Jews perished -Millions more were killed as well (Russians, Poles, and other Slavs, Gypsies, mentally or physically handicapped people, homosexuals, communists, and Jehovah's Witnesses)
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What were the consequences of the Holocaust?
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-Many fled to Israel and gave urgency to the establishment of a modern Jewish nation in the Jewish homeland -Outraged many Arabs, some of whom were displaced by the arrival of the Jews -Has fostered an enduring conflict in the Middle East -Defined a new category of crimes against humanity (genocide- the attempted elimination of entire peoples)
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Did universal condemnation of the Holocaust prevent future genocides?
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no, Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Sudan
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What were the consequences of World War II?
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-Europe's role diminished -Asian and African colonies achieved independence -Emboldened nationalist and anti-colonialist movements everywhere
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How did the Soviet Union's victory in World War II change its regime and power?
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-Gave immense credibility to the communist regime and to its' leader, Joseph Stalin -Celebrations on May 9th, Victory Day -Veterans were honored -Communist parties took power all across Eastern Europe -Communist takeover in China in 1949 -Allowed the Chinese Communist Party to gain support and credibility by leading the struggle against Japan -By 1950, the communist world seemed to many in the West very much on the offensive
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Which international organizations were created after World War II?
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-The United Nations- established in 1945 as a successor to the League of Nations; forum for international opinion; did not resolve major problems of the Cold War -1945- The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund were created whose purpose was to regulate the global economy, prevent another depression, and stimulate economic growth, especially in the poorer nations They all shared the dominant presence of the United States; the United States emerged as a global superpower after World War II
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How was Europe able to recover from the devastation of war?
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1. The resiliency of an industrial society, once it had been established 2. The ability of the major Western European countries to integrate their recovering economies 3. The United States served as a reservoir of military manpower, economic resources, and political leadership for the West as a whole.
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What was the Marshall Plan?
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-Funneled into Europe $12 billion (with advisors and technicians) -Motivated by humanitarian concern, desire to prevent a new depression by creating overseas customers for American industrial goods, and an interest in undermining the growing appeal of European communist parties -It was successful; between 1948 and the 1970s, Western European economies grew rapidly, generating widespread prosperity and improving living standards -Required its European recipients to cooperate with one another
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European Integration
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-The EEC (Common Market)- reduced their tariffs and developed common trade policies -Renamed the European Union in 1994; 12 of its members adopted a common currency, the euro -Helped sustain Europe's economic recovery
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What was the goal of NATO?
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-North Atlantic Treaty Organization -Military and political alliance -Committed the United States and its nuclear arsenal to the defense of Europe against the Soviet Union -Firmly anchored West Germany within the Western alliance -"An empire by invitation" rather than by imposition
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How did Japan become so successful?
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-Under American occupation between 1945 and 1952 -In the 2 decades following the occupation, Japan's economy grew at the remarkable rate of 10 percent a year -"Economic miracle" -Had $2 billion in American aid during the occupation and even more from US military purchases in Japan during the Korean War (1950-1953) -The democratic constitution imposed on Japan by American occupation authorities required that Japan have no military -Therefore Japan depended on the United States for its military security -More money was therefore available for productive investment
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what do all wars have in common?
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unexpected consequences
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why did japan become so successful after WWII?
answer
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Why did Europe recover more quickly in WW2 then in WWI?
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european integration and the marshall plan
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Why did the US emerge as a super power?
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they were the only country with nuclear bombs, they won the war
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what is the Marshall plan?
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when the US gave money to european countries. they all joined the ECC and became allies
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what did US demand of European benefactors?
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european recipients had to cooperate
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name two ways facism is different from communism?
answer
fascism had social mobility ,supported private businesses and private property.communism was anti religion.
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why did the facist countries turn to facism originally?
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anti-communist, people lost faith in democracy and capitalism, strong leaders
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once hitler came to power what are three things he did?
answer
1, he made press and news under state control 2. took away labor unions and enforced only one political party 3. strengthened military
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why were the nazi's so popular?
answer
-provided a scapegoat (jews) -idea that they had a solution to their economic troubles
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what did the Nazi's use to justify their persecution of jews and other minorities?
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social darwinism and scientific racism
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why was japan not considered a facist state?
answer
-didnt obey charismatic leader -racist, felt superiority -no single party -state didn't control media
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what were reasons Japan took action in Asia that started WWII?
answer
-they felt superior to other nations and to westerners -wanted to prove their strength -wanted asia for asians -against western colonial states
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why did japan attack pearl harbor?
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-wanted to attack US navy -oil embargo -U.S. blockage trade
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which Areas did hitler take over?
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1. militarized 2. austria 3. czecheslovakia 4. poland
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where and bow did WWII begin?
answer
-in asia, japan attacks china -strong japans nationalism
question
what did japan seize in 1931?
answer
Manchuria
Applied Sociology
Central And Eastern Europe
Collective Decision Making
Comparative Politics
Countries In Europe
First Past The Post
Politics of the United States
Social Welfare Policy
Politics in Europe revision – Flashcards 17 terms

Jason Westley
17 terms
Preview
Politics in Europe revision – Flashcards
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- Europe: not only continent, but an idea and identity - Changing economically, demographically and sociologically helps structure cleavages - Cleavages: splits or divisions in a society that give rise to conflicts that may well be expressed in political form, often via the formation of opposing parties representing people on either side of the split Globalisation: - Contested term - Popular definitions agree that it is a process of worldwide interconnectedness, whether it be political, economic, technological, etc. People into empires: - Ethnicities scattered: Germanics, Greeks, Slavs, Celts, etc. - Athens, power in Europe, until wars and domination by Alexander the Great. Then controlled by the Romans, who imposed Latin and transportation of people (North Africa and Middle East) - Destruction of western part of Roman Empire by Franks, Visogoths and Vandals. - Roman Catholic Church took power under the Pope, and established the Holy Roman Empire under Charlemagne. Empires into nations: - Holy Roman Empire: Loose empire, divided when Vikings settled in Northern France and produced William of Normandy - Feudal system established as territories were dominated by different groups - Increased wealth, Christian Crusades in the Holy Land took place as well as exploration of new continents - Protestantism develops, but certain regions resist it (Spain + Portugal) - Rivalry between England and Spain, but Spain is defeated and the empire declines Nation into states: - Religious rivalry not only at international level but also intranational - Example of Hungary, fighting Islamic influence from Ottoman Empire, and Habsburg intervention to establish Roman Catholicism - These struggles led to the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) - Scandinavian countries in armed conflict with kings and princes of central and western Europe - France emerged as a centralised state with bureaucracy and a military maintained to fight wars. - Countries copied this model, and balance of power was achieved - Emergence of republic-monarchies, French revolution 1789 - Emergence of Napoleon, centralised nation and aggressive military campaign - Defeated by Prussia and Britain in Russia and in Waterloo in Belgium - Emergence of nationalism and liberalism, unification of Italy and Germany Balance of power: Equilibrium existing between states when resources are sufficiently evenly distributed to ensure that no single state can dominate the others States into blocs: - Germany overseas expansion, European alliances emerged and led to WWI - Russian revolution and pulled out of the war - Germany and Austria-Hungary starved into signing armistice - Europe literally redrawn - Emergence of new states - Success of fascist dictators - Nazi-Soviet pact and start of WW2 - American involvement in 1941 after Pearl Harbour - Japanese surrender through nuclear means - Soviet presence in Europe after WW2 - USA became anti-communist and economic and military involvement in Europe - Division of Germany - Threat of communism, US efforts to secure a peaceful western Europe led to ECSC and eventually the EEC. Now the European Union - Improved relations between east and west, anticolonialism - Nevertheless, liberalism and freedom not granted by Soviet Union Fascism in Europe: Characterised by its opposition to communism, though often with anti-minority aspects The new Europe: - Collapse of the Soviet Union after Gorbachev and his glasnost and perestroika policies - Overthrow of communist dictatorship, fall of Berlin Wall -. Yeltsin attempt to hold on to Russian regional power but could not - Baltic states joined the EU and NATO - Europe now more united
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European Politics (Bale - Chapter 1) 1/2
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Europe's economy - rich in variation: - Natural resources are plentiful in Europe - Self sufficient in agriculture, but in north, dairy and meat predominate, in south, citrus, olives and grapes predominate, and in the east, the more cereal and other arable crops there are - German economy is biggest in Europe, largest GDP. Economy size correlated with population? - GDP per capita, better estimate, shows the lower living standards in eastern Europe - Former communist countries took time to join EU Regions: - German example, very wealthy and very poor regions - Wealth of regions previously correlated with industrialisation, but economy is now more service centred Postindustrialism?: - Most wealthy European states can be labelled postindustrial: service sector thrives - 69% of EU population employed in services - Lest we forget that most service jobs are low-status and low-paid. Transition: - Eastern Europe not yet postindustrial. - Still industrial, and regions focusing on primary sector are at a disadvantage - Though advancements have been made, transition of economies of post-communist Europe will not be overnight. - Most have chosen privatisation of state sectors, and some have taken other strategies, such as with currency - Still issues with unemployment - Slovenia, part of Yugoslav state, best economy of former communist countries. First to join Eurozone. Globalisation and/or Europeanisation?: - Lot of pessimistic claims that Europe is doomed to lose jobs to NIC's - But the evidence shows that unlike the US, this isn+t the case National and patterned variation: - Europeanisation does not mean uniformity - History matters in economics - Most economies in Europe are mixed economies - Economies are grouped as 'liberal', 'coordinated' or 'hybrids' - Also variation in welfare states - Social democratic: Extensive high quality services open to all irrespective of income, transfer payments to those too old or unable to work (Scandinavia) - Liberal: Basic services, many available only via means testing, limited transfer payments, safety net for the poor (UK) - Conservative, corporatist: Insurance based welfare schemes, many of which are administered by unions and employers, traditional family structures - It is possible to switch welfare states or get a hybrid Whatever happened to 'the classless society'?: - Some European countries still divided into classes, though these are different in every country - Manual working class the biggest in Europe - Growth of the middle class has not been accompanied by greater equality in wages, as often shift to service sectors are low paid - Classless society not arrived yet - Gender gap has been closed a great deal, but education still influences class - Correlation between richness and equality of a country Women - working but not yet winning?: - Influence of religion upon involvement of women in workforce - In Scandinavia, better conditions, but only when government becomes involved. Otherwise not - Influence of patterns of work: part time? - Attempts to achieve cultural change through politics: more women in cabinets In theory if not in practice - religion in Europe: - Religion still influential in some aspects of society, i.e: abortion laws - Yet, more secularisation in Europe Composition and identity: multi-ethnic, multi-national - and European?: - Individual self-identification now includes some sort of national or ethnic element - Multiple identities also present - Some nations feel more 'European' than others - Emergence of mass European identity? Overall: - Keep in mind differences between European nations while exploring Europe
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European Politics (Bale - Chapter 1) 2/2
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Introduction: Why member states matter: - Three agendas of studying European integration - First phase, dominated by international relations theories, neo-functionalism and intergovernmentalism. Largely ignored the state - Second phase, understanding the EU as a political system, use of comparative politics and understanding the EU as a polity (governance turn) - Third phase, 1990's onwards, focus on the state, intertwined with IR debates and political science - What is meant by 'member state'?: All political actors and institutions within a member state, not simply national governments - How and why do member states matter to understanding the EU?: They are key players in decision making and in the architecture of the EU. Local governments also matter in implementing EU policy. - How do member states matter in the real world of the EU?: First, the state of the European Union is interactive with the union in solutions. Second, in terms of territoriality, the state represents legitimacy, democracy and identity. The EU has made the state more permeable. Softer boundaries as well as para-public agencies. Third, member states are key players in the politics of the EU. Territorial-based interests projected upwards. Fourth, the EU is a relevant force in domestic politics. - Dynamic interaction of member states and the EU is important in a number of specific ways: National government and other actors devise ways of making effective inputs and EU business into the political process at the supranational level. EU created changing opportunity structures, though these can be limiting at times. Should the logic of political action in Brussels prevail, or that of the state? Are the EU institutions the agents of national governments? Intergovernmentalism: the member state at the centre of EU bargaining - Hoffman: - EU is seen as venture in cooperation among states, which are rational actors - Due to influence of greater economic interdependence, the EU is a form of 'international regime' - Doesn't weaken traditional state, but strengthens it. - Creation of a regime doesn't lead to the creation of others by spillover effect. - Then, Milward: - Member states don't renounce part of their sovereignty in creating common EU institutions - Revival of intergovernmentalism, Garrett: - European integration is for each state to maximise gains. - Liberal intergovernmentalism, Moravcsik: - The state is a rational actor in Europe - Power in the EU is the result of bargaining among states - Liberal theory explains the formation of national preferences - Criticisms: First, focusing on national governments neglects the internal diversity. Second, in assuming that only large states exercise power, the decision making process is simplified. Third, they see institutions as puppets of member states, though these institutions are able to express their own ideas and interests. Lastly, interests not only advanced through governments. Institutionalism and member state-EU relations: - Institutions are more than the reflections of underlying social forces - Institutions do more than produce a neutral arena for political interaction - Three variants: - Rational choice Institutionalism: Application of liberal intergovernmentalism to institutions. Institutions as agents to reduce the transaction costs in the functioning - Sociological institutionalism: Sociology of institutions. Did they depart from the interests of nations to its individual interests? Issues of identity and culture. - Historical institutionalism: Alert of the role in time, politics seen as a path dependent process with unforeseen consequences and critical situations, Institutions should be considered as structures capable of integrating experiences and norms over the course of time. - All offer insights into the way in which member states interact with the EU - Emergence of federal analysis Governance approaches and member state-EU relations: - Governance - Exploration of policy networks - Plurality - Relationships between European integration and democracy Towards a domestic politics of the EU?: - More light on the member states, underexplored research area. - Impossible to understand EU politics without considering the domestic politics. - Need to keep in mind of the variations of the 27 states - EU's impact on member states Analysing Europeanisation: - Europeanisation: impact of integration upon member states - Also, three propositions: - It strengthens the state (Moravcisk) - It creates a new multi-level politics (Sandholtz) - EU has transformed governance (Kohler-Koch) - These are 'precursors to the literature' of Europeanisation Origins: - Attributed to greater integration in the 1980's (Single European Act) - Enhanced by Maastricht - Enlargements of the EU (member states) Usages: - 5 Areas of Europeanisation: (Olsen) - Changes in external boundaries - Developing institutions at the European level - Central penetration of national systems of governance - Exporting forms of political organisation - Political unification project - Focus: Consequences of integration - Featherstone: Comparing and contrasting understandings of Europeanisation - Flockhart: Historical sociology of the process - Classification of impact of Europeanisation: three fold - Polity: institutions and patterns of governance - Policy - Politics: parties, public opinion, identity, etc. Concept: - One needs to make it clear how Europeanisation is used - European integration: concerned with political and policy development at the supranational level - Europeanisation: concerned with the consequences of this process for member states as well as non member states who are targets of EU policy - Definition remains contested - Significance of discourse - In France, Europeanisation seen as force resisting globalisation, and in the UK, seen as a force facilitating it Theory: - No theory of Europeanisation - Different schools affect the study of Europeanisation, i.e: neo-functionalism, new institutionalism - Each theory places more emphasis on different actors. New institutionalism places emphasis on institutions for example Methodological issues: - Clashes about methodology have led to increased attention to research design - Research design should test whether Europeanisation can be identified as the cause of domestic change - Differing models are due to varying research traditions Directionality: - Europeanisation: Circular rather than undirectional because of the bottom up nature of EU - Horizontal vs vertical? - Horizontal: transfer of concepts and policies between member states under circumstances where the EU has not played a legislative role - Vertical: EU's effect on public policy to impact on structures of governance - Research agenda reaching end of the road because pace of integration has slackened and enlargement has become a less important topic
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The European Union and its Member states (Bulmer & Lequesne - Overview)
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Introduction: - The system of government in any modern democracy has: legislature, executive, judiciary and head of state - Legislature enacts laws - Executive runs the country - Judiciary adjudicates disputes between individuals and other legal entities - Head of state in charge - Executive is ultimate source of political power and decision-making capacity in modern democracies - Other organs of government, create system of checks and balances on the executive Separation or fusion of powers?: - Most important difference between constitutions: separation or fusion of powers between legislature and executive - This is owed to the distinction between presidential and parliamentary government systems Separation of powers regimes: - In separation of powers regimes there is a clear separation between legislature and the executive - Chief executive in this regime typically elected by the people and called a president - President elects cabinet of people responsible for particular policy areas and government depts. - Executive cannot dismiss the legislative and vice versa. - H/e, the legislature has not direct power to force the executive to do anything - Example: US - Senate approves members of cabinet Fusion of powers regimes: - Parliamentary governments: executive is constitutionally responsive to the legislature - Executive must retain the confidence of the legislature - Executive must resign if it loses a legislative motion of no confidence - Executive not directly elected by the people but indirectly by an elected parliament - Parliaments can also dismiss prime minister and cabinet - Also in power of prime minister to dismiss the legislature and force new legislative elections Splitting the difference? 'Semi-presidentialism': - President directly elected by the people who has exclusive right to nominate prime minister - May also dissolve the national assembly to call new elections - However, also a prime minister and cabinet with full responsibility for government policy, and who must maintain support in a directly elected legislature. - Legislature can dismiss the prime minister - No one can dismiss the president - Possible dispute between president and prime minister if from different parties Parliamentary government in modern Europe - Cycle: - One starts with an incumbent government, and one then asks if an election is legally required of PM seeks dissolution? If yes, dissolution of legislature and fresh elections. If no, incumbent government stays. If a majority of legislators do indeed still prefer the incumbent government, then the cycle repeats. But if a majority of legislators now want alternative executive, then they have constitutional authority to remove the incumbent and install preferred alternative. Other possibility is that the legislature is dissolved and there is an election for a new legislature The prime minister: chief executive: - Chief executive or head of government in modern European democracies: Prime ministers, thought in Austria and Germany, chancellors - Head of one of the main legislative parties. - Controls both the legislature and executive - In Britain: One party wins an overall majority of seats, Prime Minister is leader of the single party that controls the legislature, and at the same time, is also chief executive of the country. Chief executive, ability to control a legislative majority and party leader all under one person. Only real threat: within the party. - If a newly elected legislative isn't controlled by prime minister, then prime minister has lost the election. - If citizens want to change their chief executive, they do so by voting in legislative elections - Prime minister has formal power to hire and fire cabinet ministers - Legal right to dissolve the legislature and call an early election - Access to information about every branch of government - Methods of disposal: - First: legislative election, opposition can push prime minister to early election - Second: Change in majority coalition of legislators that keeps the government in office (vote of no confidence) - Third: from inside the party, loss of leadership - Overall: although primeministers can be powerful, their positions can be snatched from them suddenly The cabinet: - Prime minister and the cabinet: the government of the country - Cabinet comprises a set of ministers - Each minister has two roles: - Individual head of a government department - Member of cabinet that makes or approves important political decisions as a collective entity. - Cabinet member generally in charge of a government department. They have individual ministerial responsibility - H/e, most refuse to resign in response to problems in their dept., only resign in major catastrophes. - Collective cabinet responsibility - when cabinet makes a decision all are collectively responsible. - Cabinet confidentiality - might undermine the cabinet as a whole - No vetos in cabinet, but a minister can threaten to resign if a decision is made - Realistic way in which a fully specific and implementable policy proposal can be put to the cabinet for decision is for this to be developed within one or more government departments - Minister of dept. presents the proposal - Ministers may have little knowledge about other ministers' depts. Junior ministers: - Not members of the cabinet - Appointed to head subsections of the major depts of state - Appointed by prime ministers The head of state: - The president. Different roles depending on country - Often few constitutional powers - Some weaker than others. Strongest in France - Mostly weak constitutional role Monarchs: - Countries without president has monarchs as heads of state - Ceremonial role, but may vary between countries.
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Representative Government in Modern Europe (Gallagher - Chapter 2)
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Parliaments and governments: - How much power to parliaments have in relations to governments? Wrong question in Europe. - Government elected by parliament and can be ousted from office by it. Parliament wields power through the government that it has elected - Significance of the party - When talking about parliament we are talking about interaction of a small number of political party groups - MPs directed by party - Parliament dominated by party groups - Any constraints imposed by parliament on government come not from a monolithic body but from one of possible sources: - One, rules that allow opposition to block or defeat government plans - Second, political cultural constraints that inhibit the government from railroading its proposals through in the face of strong objections from the opposition - Third, government might not have majority support in parliament in the first place - Government may receive only conditional support from its own MPs - King: Suggested that parliament could be better analysed in terms of a number of modes in which key players interact: - Interparty mode: relations between different actors in parliament and government are determined by their affiliations - Crossparty mode: ministers and MPs combine to interact on the basis of cross-party interests - Non-party mode: government and parliament interact without regard to party. (Corresponds to the traditional model that sees parliament and government as separate) - Lijphart: Two categories of democratic regime. Westminster majoritarian model vs consensus model - Majoritarian system: government of the day has an assured majority among MPs and can rely on getting all of its legislation through virtually unscathed. Cabinet dictatorship. Role of opposition to criticise the government rather than to influence it. - Consensus model: Finding broad consensus in parliament if possible rather than on merely imposing the will of the parliamentary majority. Cabinets tend to have a genuine give and take relationship with parliament. - Problems with using variations in parliamentary rules to explain variations in power: On paper, the rules may imply that a parliament wields much more power than it actually does, and that it is questionable how far differences in rules can explain anything - Therefore: in Lijphart's majoritarian model, all relationships between gvts and parliaments take place in the interparty mode. In consensus model, greater non-party or cross-party mode. The roles of parliaments: 1. Appointing and dismissing governments: Votes of no confidence 2. Parliaments and law-making: in parliamentary systems, governments can expect to see the great majority of their proposals accepted by parliament. Mostly initiated by government. Great variation in all European parliaments. - In parliaments in majoritarian systems, the government tends to control the parliamentary agenda, whereas in consensual systems the agenda is decided either by agreement among the party groups or by the president of parliament after consultation with the party groups. - In consensual parliaments the most important work is done in committees, whereas in parliaments in majoritarian systems the floor of the chamber is the main arena - In consensual parliaments, bills typically go to committees before they are debated by the full parliaments 3. Parliaments and law-making in majoritarian countries: Government dominated parliaments. Greece, Britain, France and Ireland. Example of Britain, party not in power gets more power than those in other countries. Seek to criticise. Interparty mode. 4. Parliaments and law-making in consensus countries: Austria, Germany, Scandinavia. negotiation and compromise. Cross party mode. Example of Scandinavia, government little power in determining the agenda. 5. Parliaments and oversight of government: All parliaments see themselves as having the role of overseeing the work of the government. Use of 'question time', extracting information from the government. Interpelaation. Question time but with debate. Use of committees set up to monitor government depts. These committees can be strong when they are small and numerous. If they are big, interest groups seek to colonise them. Parliaments and parties: - Problem with assessing arguments about the dominations of parliament by political parties or by government is that it is difficult to try to measure the power of any parliament - PPG unity means that the leaders of these parties are far more important people, politically, than the typical rank and file member of parliament - Most MPs forced to vote along party lines, and most do so out of loyalty - People vote for parties rather than for candidates, and MPs see themselves as members of their party's parliamentary groups. Voters vote for parties: - In Europe, not voting for candidates but parties - When people vote, they are helping to choose a government - Party ticket voting - Size of politician's personal vote is much less in Europe because the fate of European candidates is determined way more by national political forces - Incumbent candidates have much less of a built in advantage in Europe than they do in United States - If criticism of particular individuals of the party, they generally lose their seats - Party labels are valuable commodities in Europe Parliamentarians and party discipline: - Sometimes punishments for not voting along party lines - Extreme cases: expulsion from party - Keeps party discipline Parliamentarians and constituency representation: - MPs: Constituency representation. Promote and defend the interests of their geographical constituency - Constituency work takes up a lot of time of MPs, about half of time in Britain, and much lower in Poland - Electoral system determines this - In some countries, it is not required, not incentives given - Also determined by political culture European parliaments: one chamber or two?: - Main argument for bicameralism: second chamber can act as a check on the possibility of an overbearing majority in the lower house, and that it may be able to discuss policy proposals in a more reflective manner than the highly politicised lower house, applying sober second thoughts and drawing on non party technical expertise. - Main argument against: if the second chamber agrees with the first it is superfluous, and if it does not it is pernicious - Bicameralism is in decline - Can be conservative: effect is to protect the status quo - Depends by how much bargaining power each house possesses - Impact depends on the composition and the power of a second chamber - Mostly indirect election, left wing not as strong as right wing in upper chambers - Direct election in Poland, where it plays a significant role - Parliaments elsewhere: only one chamber - Upper house less power than the lower house, except in Italy, Belgium and Romania
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Representative Government in Modern Europe (Gallagher - Chapter 3)
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Introduction: - Elections: central to representative government in Europe. Significance both symbolic and practical. Practical: formation of governments Symbolic: legitimises a country's political system in the eyes of its citizens - Variation across Europe in the precise set of electoral laws that determines how the votes that are cast are transformed into seats in the legislature - Electoral system can affect the nature of its party system, socio-demographic composition of the legislature, and likelihood that governments will be formed by a coalition of parties rather than just a single party - Referendums: used to obtain voters' decision on a specific issue Who votes?: - Universal adult franchise - Changing definitions of adulthood: Some countries from 16 to 20 - Qualifications needed to be an election candidate are the same as those for being a voter - Electoral register contains the names of all who are entitled to vote - Voter turn out higher in Europe than in the United States - Some countries it is compulsory - However, since 1970's, turnout has been decreasing When do people vote?: - In most countries: maximum period between elections, but not a minimum - Prime ministers have the power to recommend the dissolution of parliament to a head of state - France: presidential elections every 5 years - Also elections for local councils - Elections of European parliament - Voter fatigue? Types of electoral system: - Electoral systems: mechanisms that turn the votes cast by people on election day into seats to be occupied by deputies in the parliament. These structure the choices that the voters can make and converts these choices into a legislature - Most use proportional representation - No two European countries have electoral systems that are identical - Decided by political actors - Generally, systems have stayed the same, but changed in a few countries (i.e: Greece and Italy) - Majoritarian vs proportional representation systems. - PR systems: put more emphasis on the concept of proportionality, the numerical accuracy with which the votes cast for parties are translated into seats won in parliament. I.e: 25% of votes equals 25% of seats - Majoritarian systems: aim to not achieve high proportionality, but by prioritising other criteria they accept a certain level of disproportionality as inevitable Plurality and majority systems: - Only two European countries do not use an electoral system that has at least an element of PR, UK and France - UK: Country divided into constituencies, one of which has an MP in the House of Commons - Single member plurality/first past the post: MP with most votes wins - Merit of simplicity for voters: responsibility for interests of the constituency lie with MP - Critics of FPTP: 1. Person can be elected despite only getting 40% of total votes 2. Strategic voting 3. If used for national elections, might be unrepresentative - When a party has the will to change an electoral system it does not have the power and vice versa - Alternative vote: the single transferable vote in single-member constituencies. Voters rank candidates in order of presence - AV is a majority system, as opposed to plurality system, because the counting process continues until one candidate has a majority - Plural voting system: Only allowed to vote for a single candidate and the candidate with the most votes wins - Majority: multiple candidate until one candidate has a majority over all other remaining candidates. - No country in Europe uses AV to elect parliament. Though, in France, deputies are returned from single member constituencies, but there is provision for two rounds of voting - Two round double ballot system has one advantage over British one: gives supporters of losing first round candidates a chance to switch their second round vote to one of the serious contenders - Disadvantage, considers first round support rather than broad support Proportional representation: - Key to PR system: multi-member constituency. Seats are allocated to parties within each constituency in broad proportion to the votes each party receives. The larger the district magniture, the more proportional national election result List PR systems: - Each party presents a list of candidates in each constituency - Seats shared out among the parties in proportion to the votes they win, in accordance with a predetermined formula - Charateristics: 1. Electoral formulae: Most common is D'Hondt method and Sainte-Laguë method. Some methods favour larger parties and vice versa 2. District magnitude and higher tiers: Seat allocation method: just one factor determining proportionality. Another is district magnitude. The larger the district the more proportional it'll be. Higher tier seats in place to award parties to compensate them for any shortfall in the seats they won in the constituencies to increase proportionality Mixed systems: - MPs can be elected by two different routes - Voter has two votes, one to choose a local constituency MP and the other to choose a party list - Two types of link between the systems: 1. Compensatory mixed systems, the list seats are awarded to parties to ensure that their overall seat total is proportional to their list votes 2. Parallel, where the list seats are shared out purely on the basis of list votes - Mixed systems: best of both worlds: Citizens have individual MP but the list ensure that the relationship between seats and votes is much closer than it would be under a non-PR system. - Though, mixed systems have statistically significant lower levels of accountability, government effectiveness, control of corruption, representation of women in parliament and voter turnout Thresholds: - Prevents smaller parties from gaining seat - Threshold also set at constituency elections Which candidates get the list seats?: - In some countries: order of candidates drawn up by the party organisation is a fixed ranking that the voters cannot alter (non-preferential, closed or blocked lists). Decided within the party to be placed on top of the list. - In others: No default order, the voters decide. These are open or unblocked lists. Intra party electoral competition - Closed lists: Italy, Portugal, Germany - Open lists: Finland, Luxembourg, Poland - Trend: towards preference votes The single transferable vote: - Aims to give PR to the shades of opinion within the constituency - Voters: cast a vote by ranking as many as they wish of the candidates - Droop Quota - Any candidate that equals or exceeds Droop quota is declared elected - If not sufficient candidates, the votes are distributed and transferred to the other candidates in proportion to the next preferences marked for them - Advantages: gives voters opportunity to convey reveal preferences, voters not constrained by party lines, voters control the way their votes are used, opportunity to express opinion as to the direction their party should take, ensures that voters can vote sincerely - Criticisms: Weakens internal unity of parties, can be only realistically used in countries with small constituencies, facilitates the election of independent candidates Why electoral systems matter: - Pr vs plurality systems Proportionality: - Greater under PR than plurality systems - Especially those with large district magnitude - Threshold may create disproportionality The number of parties: - Duverger: - Single member plurality system favours a two party system, double ballot majority tends to produce multipartism with alliances, and PR leads to the formation of many independent parties - SMP associated with a two party system because of both mechanical and psychological effects - Mechanical: smaller parties with support spread across the country do not reap a proportional reward in seats for their share of the votes - Psychological: voters are aware of the mechanical effect: vote for significant parties, or candidate - Electoral systems: do play a major part, not a deterministic one, but in influencing the shape of party systems - Duvergers law: plurality-rule elections (such as first past the post) structured within single-member districts tend to favor a two-party system and that "the double ballot majority system and proportional representation tend to favor multipartism". Coalition or single party government?: - Argument against PR: Difficulty of forming a government - Single party governments are much more likely under majoritarian electoral systems - Coalitions more common in PR Policy outputs -Voters' preferences are better represented in parliaments by PR systems - Electoral systems can have an impact on many aspects of public policy - Consensus democracy/PR: kinder and gentler when it comes to welfare spending, protection of the environment, etc. and better in macroeconomic performance and control of violence The backgrounds of parliamentarians: - PR facilitates the election of women because of the multi-member constituencies - In single member constituency: reluctant in selecting a representative of an ethnic, religious or linguistic minority.
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Representative Government in Modern Europe (Gallagher - Chapter 11)
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Introduction: - Executive is responsible to the legislature, and governments are not chosen by the people - People vote to choose a parliament - Political reality: elections are much more about choosing governments than they are about choosing a set of people to legislate - Real prize that is won or lost at parliamentary elections is a place in the government - Legislative coalitions needed to provide majority support for any government Parliamentary votes of confidence and no confidence: - If such a vote is carried, the government is deemed dismissed if it does not resign voluntarity - Constitutional convention that a government will in fact resign if defeated in a no confidence vote. - In many countries, failure of government's annual finance bill or budget, is the same as losing a vote of no confidence - Main form of legislative control over the executive is to throw the entire executive out on its ear. But not always need for such measures Investiture requirements: - In some countries: incoming government must win an explicit formal legislative investiture vote before it can take office - Important, as absence of this makes it easier to form minority governments - Sometimes majority for specific issues Formateurs: the role of the head of state: - Typical that the head of state charges constitutional authority to government. - Swearing in function, known as a formateur - In some countries, the initiative in government formation lies with the outgoing government The status quo and 'caretaker' governments: - Always a legally incumbent government in place - Once a government has been defeated or resigned, the incumbent gvt. remains in office to run the country as a care administration - Powers of caretaker governments depend on country. Some have full power, some have have contrained powers. Agreeing a joint programme of government: - Two concerns in government formation negotiations: 1. Who will hold the various cabinet positions 2. Joint policy programme for the government, particularly important for coalitions - Resolving policy differences. Must come to an agreement Choosing a set of cabinet ministers: - Choosing government involves choosing the senior politicians who will hold cabinet portfolios - Must be accepted to parliament - Coalitions:each party leader nominates ministers. They may also veto an occasional controversial nomination by another party leader - Ministers chosen for their loyalty to the party or their ability to represent varying strands of party opinion - Political skills considered over administrative - Mostly former MPs, though in some countries this does not hold Government formation: - The typical European election does not definitively settle the matter of who forms the government - When government formations immediately followed an election, the incumbent cabinet and prime minister went back into office in fully one third of cases, and when government formation was taking place without election, incumbent prime minister and parties almost never returned to office - Election results: can lead to predictable changes of coalition government - Final say in government formation lies with elected politicians, not voters Getting into office: - Fame and status accompanied by the title - Interest in influencing public policy Office seeking politicians and 'minimal winning' governments: - Assumption: politicians only want the extrinsic benefits of being in office. - Minimal winning cabinets carry no passangers, they include only parties whose seats are essential to maintain the government's parliamentary majority - Exclusion of parties whose votes have no significance for parliamentary majority - Opposite: oversized or surplus majority government Policy-oriented politicians and ideology compact governments: - Another assumption: if politicians only want intrinsic benefits (i.e: change public policy), then minimal connected winning cabinets: comprising parties that are adjacent to each other in policy terms and cannot lose a party off either 'end' without losing their majority Minority governments: - Minority governments have majority opposition in parliament - Strøm: minority governments should be seen as a normal and democratic outcome - Can stay in power if opposition is divided Surplus majority governments: - Grand coalitions: common unifying goal: surplus majority - Determined by constitution - Carrying passengers in cabinet coalitions - Establishing an oversized government: allows for defections. Types of government in modern Europe: - Minimal winning coalition and surplus majority coalition most common in Europe
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Representative Government in Modern Europe (Gallagher - Chapter 12)
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What are parties, and what are they for? - Description: - Represent socially or culturally significant interests at the same time as aggregating their sometimes contradictory preferences - Recruiting, selecting, socialising and providing material and ideological support to candidates and elected politicians who will do the representing, often at both national and sub-national level - Structuring an array of choices available to voters at parliamentary and local elections, which by their very presence, they render competitive - Facilitate the formation of governments that produce coordinated and coherent policy responses to perceived and real problems - Mediating between millions of citizens and a state that otherwise might act exclusively in the interest of those it employs and those whose economic clout could give them a disproportionate say in its direction - However, in characteristics above, the less formal functions aren't covered, such as 'jobs for the boys' - Political parties: organisations that, for the most part, recruit candidates to contest elections in the hope that they can participate in government, or at leash push it in the direction of its own ideas that reflect socio-economic interests and/or moral values of those who support them Organisation: - May impact ideology, flexibility and dynamics of the party - Ideology may also impact organisation - Accounts of modern party: in the hands of leaders determined not to allow their more zealous supporters to scupper their electoral chances by remaining true to whatever cause the party was set up to promote or defend - Organise through common sense: logical hierarchy - Presidentialisation of parties: the parties play little more than na supporting role to the celebrity politicians who are their leaders - However, we're way off from that situation, parties existed for a long time, can replace the 'face' quickly - Green parties also show the opposite: They're open parties, allow for discussion with members - Ideology: guide to understanding the distribution of power within different parties - Also parliamentary system and candidate selection - Practices of party The evolution of political party organisation: - Cadre parties: controlled by an elite small group consisting of parliamentarians and local notables, who rallied members who were expected to contribute funds and campaign - Mass parties: branch structure in which members could hope to contribute to policy - Catch-all-parties: attempt to catch the 'floating voter' and interest group backing. Focus on pragmatism rather than ideology - Cartel parties: balance of power that might be captured by activist members - Anti-system: reaction to the collusive consensus Party systems and party families: - Most political scientists employ a dual approach to classifying party systems (Giovanni Sartori) - Equal weight to the degree of 'fragmentation' and the ideological distance between them ('polarisation') - Fragmentation: number of parties present in the system - Polarisation: ideological difference between them - Can be plotted on graph - Comparing countries - UK: few parties and little distance between parties (moderate two-partyism') - Germany, Sweden, Poland Spain: difference between parties little, but more of them (moderate multipartyism) - France, Netherlands, Italy: lots of parties and big difference between them (polarised multipartyism) - Another method of classifying party systems (Peter Mair) - Most systems fall into moderate multipartyism - Measure of competition for government - Can be open or closed - Closed: 1. alternation in governments tends to be that all the parties in office lose power after an election 2. Combinations of parties that form governments are familiar rather than innovative 3. Narrow range of mainstream parties tend to govern - Open: - More opaque, fluid, innovative, inclusive and less predictable - In closed system, competition will be more 'centriperal' (more in the centre) than 'centrifugal' (toward the extreme) - More of a supplement rather than replace the Sartori style schema - How did party systems come to be? Political scientists argue that they are rooted in social conflicts which they call cleavages - Cleavages: splits or divisions in a society that give rise to conflicts that may well be expressed in political form, often via the formation of opposing parties representing people on either side of the split - Theses: they helped structure or even freeze Europe's party system - Some have developed since, and some have declined or halted - Extent of relevance of a cleavage helped to determine which parties were present, as well as which were stronger or weaker - Extent to which existing parties were able to adapt in order to mobilise on that cleavage -Not all countries will have been affected by all cleavages, so not all party groups present - Evolution of cleavages: - 1800: Land-industry, owner-worker - 1900: Urban-rural, centre-periphery, church-state, revolution-gradualism, democracy-totalitarianism - 1950: materialism-postmaterialism, multiculturalism-homogeneity - With these cleavages, came different groups: - 1800 Libs, cons, socialists/social-democrats - 1900: Agrarian, regionalists, christian democrats, communists, fascists - 1950: Greens, far right - Party competition now into two dimensions, left-right and authoritarian-libertarian: emergence of GALTAN - GALTAN: Green/Alternative/Libertarian and Traditionalism/Authority/Nationalism - Thus, relationship between cleavages and parties can be used to predict the number of parties in a system - Lijphart formula: minimum number of parties = number of issue dimensions + 1 - However, does not always hold exactly. One must ignore the very small parties - Should political scientists group parties together? - Generalisations are useful, but memberships of the family does not always involve direct lineage - Looking at individual families: Socialist and social democratic parties: - Emerged from owner-worker cleavage - Agitation of not merely political rights but economy and society - Allied with trade union - State ownership of key industries and utilities, progressive taxation Conservative parties: - defence of the socio-economic privileges of the traditional mainly landed, hierarchy against the rising liberal middle class - Universal suffrage - State intervention should be limited largely to policing law and order and providing for the defence of the realm - Most successful in countries that has two main parties and in countries with absence of a traditionally more centrist Christian democracy Christian democratic parties: - Christian democratic parties were markedly more positive about state and trade union involvement than some of their conservative counterparts - Since WW2, catch all parties, less focus on religion - More neoliberal economic policies Liberal parties: - Commerce and professions - legal, property, religious, and political rights of the individual - Split two ways: - Neo liberalism: prioritises a commitment to the free market and opposition to state interference in the economy as well as matters of morality - Social liberalism: sympathetic toward government intervention in the economy and welfare policy Green parties: - Against unsustainability and exploitative nature of growth oriented economic development - Post materialist: quality of life rather than standard of living - Anti militarism and anti discrimination - Better ties with developing world - Social justice and liberal tolerance of alternative life styles - Not so popular in environment conscious parties - Virtually non existent in central and Eastern Europe Far-right parties: - Nationalist, conservative and militaristic responses to communist revolution in Russia and economic difficulties - Populism, low tax and low interference, and conservative social values - Eurosceptic Communist and Left Parties - dissatisfaction with gradualism of social democracy - Can be achieved rapidly through revolution - Stress 'new politics', anti discriminations, aid to the developing world, environmental awareness, antimilitarism Regional and ethnic parties: - Independence, important role in sub national and sometimes national coalition governments - Numerous in Spain Agrarian and Centre parties - generous welfare, agricultural support and environmental conservation - Small producers don't want to be sold to multinationals and the European union The bases of party systems - social and institutional; luck and skill: - Though historical cleavages structure present day party systems, doesn't mean parties don't develop away from their original intentions - Can become flexible - Strength of parties not determined by social conflicts, but also by man made constitutional arrangements, 'institutionalists' - Electoral system - Plurality system may make it easier for regionalist parties - Constituency size also affects this - Party systems are the product of both institutional arrangements and social forces - How institutionalised the system is may also affects party systems - Institutionalised: how predictable, stable and legitimate the party system is Party system change?: - Europanisation of party systems from west to east and north to south might be a two way process - Fragmentation caused by two things: 1. Electoral volatility: when voters switch their votes between parties from one election to another 2. Dealignment: the way in which people's political preferences seem to be becoming less related to their location on one or other side of certain key cleavages - Electoral volatility in less establishied democracies (Eastern Europe) - Switching of votes: more parties - Depends on factors such as how long the country has been democratic - Green, far right and regionalist parties on way to becoming old parties. Not flash parties at all. - Party systems thawing? Could be: - Increase in structural change: migration, occupation and family patterns, and changes in institution - Overstating the changes of party systems - Not at a pace where we should be worrying about a dissolution of party systems Are parties in decline?: YES: Losing members, less party identity - Fewer people bothered to vote - Can't survive without state subsidies - People getting more involved with pressure groups than parties NO: never had as many members as one may think, loss of party is not bad things - turnout for elections can still increase - state funding of parties varies considerably - Pressure groups push only their point of view on others, while parties try to make things more balanced The Europeanisation of parties and party systems?: - EU provides parties to persuade and learn from other parties, but also exposes party to issues of ideology and organisation - Representatives of national parties elected to the European Parliament need to work together, which they do by forming party groups - Transnational activity could lead to coordinated campaigning at EP elections - Regionalisation - Yet, political cycles in EU countries not yet synchronised - Though not completely unaffected by European integration - Parties not bandwagoners, they can also build them
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European Politics (Bale - Chapter 5)
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Introduction: - Forming coalitions with right wing parties not a sure way to stem their success - Populism: Use of appeals to the people or claim to represent general interests versus the interests of a specific group (opportunism). Also use of us versus them, juxtaposing identity and common interests. Also use negativity in political communication - Populism, not political ideology, a style of politics that is intricately related to particular political ideologies Right-wing populism in Europe: - FN in France, anti-Semetic elements - Support from middle classes, small businessmen and farmers - Under Marine, de-demonization of the party - Less antisemitism, more anti-immigrant, islamophobic position - Protection of the French people against globalisation - Anti EU - FPÖ in Austria, programmatic flexibility - Strong under Haider, appeal to working class, anti-immigrat, anti-Muslim - Strong under Strache too - PiS in Poland - Protection of Polish people and catholicism - Fidesz in Hungary - illiberal authoritarianism - New constitution and restricted freedom of the media - Flexible - Interventionist economic policies - anti EU and immigrant - UKIP in the UK, exit of the EU - AfD in Germany, anti-immigration, anti-islam, anti-media - Euro-skepticism Shared in common: - Issues: political, economic and cultural, such as immigration - Support: middle class, small business - working class now also being mobilised - More fluid in Eastern Europe as less established party systems - Strategies: stark generalisations, strict distinctions, emotional appeals and exaggerations, foster fear and anger, free media attention
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The Rise of Right-Wing Populism in Europe and the United States (Thomas Greven)
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Introduction: - Parties in Europe matter, 'unthinkable in terms of the parties' What do parties do? - Present in and at the core of politics in all European countries - Crucial functions: 1. Structure the political world 2. Recruit and socialise the political elite 3. Linkage between rulers and ruled between civil society and the state 4. Aggregate interests, unlike interest groups Basic party organisation: - Basic organisational elements are very similar - Members of parties belong to a local unit - Branches or units send candidates to annual conference, which elect most members of the party's national executive, which runs the party organisation between conferences - Other main element in the party is the parliamentary party or caucus comprising the party's elected deputies - Some parties: fractionalised, number of clearly defined groups, jostle for power and position - Competition within the party: over purity of ideology Who becomes a party member?: - To become member: annual fee and pledge - Expected to attend regular local branch meetings - Party members: only a minority of party supporters as a whole - Most parties claim to have more members than they really have - Number of delegates sent to annual conference can depend on how many members it has, so the larger it claims to be, the more delegates it can send - Only a small fraction of those who vote or a party are committed to joining it - And only a minority of this minority can be considered active - Bolstering membership: social clubs? - Membership figures: declining across western Europe, except Greece and Spain - Why? - Three main motives for joining or leaving: 1. Material: desire to gain some tangible reward 2. Solidary: desire for social contact and a sense of comradeship in a common enterprise 3. Purposive: desire to advance certain policy goals - In Eastern Europe, also low membership: distrust from communist times - Weak links with civil society - Parties can be short-lived, come and go rapidly - Party members not entirely socially representative of party voters: women and young people underrepresented, members usually retired - Parties have become less firmly implanted in society than previously The activities of party members: - Mostly active at election time, important role in campaigning at the grassroots level - Putting up posters, party stalls, handing leaflets - Otherwise, not that active: some attend branch meetings regularly to discuss ways of expanding the organisation at the local level, or to decide their stance on issues due to arise at the next annual conference - Observations: people only excited when talking about who will become the next constituency organisation chairperson - Previously, belonging to parties was a way of life - Own newspaper, branch offices over Germany were centres of social activity, ran health service - Golden age of mass and active party membership is yet another golden age that perhaps never really existed - Though, members not redundant: important in giving these parties a character Power within parties: - Internal affairs of parties: continuous process of accommodation and mutual adjustment - Party remains together because a balance of power is respected and no one element tries to achieve complete control - Elements of party organisation, leader, MPs, rank and file members and so on, may jostle for position, but rarely open warfare as most have same political outlook - Areas of struggle within the party: - Party manifesto and programme, election of party leader and selection of the parliamentary candidates, sources of party finance The changing shape of European parties: - From cadre parties to cartel parties The future of European parties: - Whether it'll survive or not: party in the electorate: parties' implantation in civil society - Party in public office: those working as representatives - Party in central office: headquarters and central slogans - Outlook, parties will continue to exist and so will their members - Vital to organs of representation in European politics
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Representative Government in Modern Europe (Gallagher - Chapter 10)
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The Social Bases of Party Support: - Why study elections: How political attitudes influence behaviour - Window into the minds of the citizens - Reflects the changing patterns of citizen politics - Most make decisions during campaign and issues of the day - Policy-centered debates or reliance on habitual loyalties? Economic issues or cultural issues? The Social Group Model of Voting: - Social attachments as important influences on voting choice - They represent the distinct social interests - Partisanship studies: class, religion, residence - Class and religion: indicates values and political beliefs - Social characteristics: reflect political cues to which a voter is exposed - Social groups: orient voters to political issues and providing information about politics - These act as shortcuts to political decisions Social Class and the Vote: - Class politics: Old politics: conflict between the haves and the have nots - Issues they face in reaching economic and material goals - Though, class conflicts still relevant, the 1 percent versus the 99 percent - Social class: in terms of occupation - Classified based on their relationship to means of production, such as bourgeoisie and proletariat - However, now there's new middle class and white-collar workers too - New middle class: important addition, lacks a clear position in traditional dichotomy, focused on New Politics issues - Each of these social classes have voting preferences - Nowadays, the new middle class is now the largest group of voters and more important, has ambiguous partisan preferences - Alford index of class voting, in decline due to less class voting - New frameworks for class voting, only of modest value Why Is Class Voting Decreasing?: - Butler and Stokes: group-based voting as a two-step process: voters linked to a social group, and then the group is linked to a political party - Narrowing in the life conditions of social classes can also weaken the connection between individuals and their respective classes - Embourgeoisement and proletarianization of both working and middle class - Social and occupational mobility may also weaken the link between individuals and traditional social classes - Another explanation is changing relationship between class groups and the political parties - Why it's important: signals a change in the nature of political conflict, signals a change of how voters reach decisions, social modernisation implies that the long term decline in class voting should continue Religion and the Vote: - Religious identity shapes values and political positions - Religious cleavage, political issues often linked to religious values (abortion, homosexual rights, and moral standards) - Varied composition of religions in countries: hard to study - Catholics, generally support right - Protestants, generally support left - Varies per country - Jewish Americans: democrats - Influence of religiosity and church attendance - Austria most influenced by church attendance and voting - Cleavages vary around Europe - Catholic nations of Europe, less church attendance - Fundamentalism: increase of religious cues - Religious cleavages have decreased - Denominational differences may have narrowed slightly in some of these cases, but has not decreased as much as class voting Other Social Group Differences: - Regional interests can shape party choice - Urban/rural residence often reflects different life conditions, albeit this factor is not as influential - Gender differences, women supporting the Left - Race and ethnicity as possible cleavages - Hispanics and Afro-American vote mostly democratic - Sociological factors: weak and declining influence on voting choice New Politics and the Vote: - Post material cleavage may produce a new partisan alignment - Environmental protection, gender equality, multiculturalism - Attracts the young, new middle class, better educated, nonreligious - Materialists prefer the right, and postmaterialists the left - However, data not as available as other social characteristics and vote - Growing impact on voting choice - However, this doesn't mean that more people will vote left - Old politics cleavages will remain as major influence on voting for some time The Transformation of Social Cleavages: - Changes in social conditions: Social changes have occurred in all advanced industrial democracies - Previously, working and middle class cleavage was more important - Social modernisation weakened class alignments - Secularisation is decreasing the influence of religion on voting behaviour - Partisan realignment, shift in the group basis of party coalitions - Post material values cannot be identified the same way that class, religion or region can - Now defined by identities with fixed social groups to issue/value cleavages that are based on communities of like minded people - Issue group cleavages rather than social group cleavages
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Citizen politics (Dalton - Chapter 8)
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Partisanship and Voting: - Opinions and attitudes of voters as pivotal factors in their voting choices - Opinions and attitudes of voters as pivotal factors in their voting choices A Sociopsychological Model of Voting: - Development of voting models to include psychological factors, such as issues and attitudes as influences on voting choice - Explains the limits of sociological group based approach - Model combining both sociological and psychological influences - Funnel of causality - At the wide mouth of the funnel, socioeconomic conditions that generate the basic conflicts of interests within society: economic structure, social divisions, regional alignments (structure party system) - These then influence group loyalties and basic value orientations, attitudes that influence political behaviour - Then group identities and values shape the political attitudes (party attachment, issue opinions and candidate images) - Also events of the campaign, media reports, campaign activity, etc. influence issue opinions and candidate images - Very useful model, factors on the left of the figure are distant from the voting decision, and the factors on the right are more proximate - Wide end of the funnel, broad social conditions, political factors towards the voting decision - Factors on left are conditions of society, factors on right are considerations made by the individual voter - Model successfully predicts voting choices - Predicts how we think about elections and how researchers analyse the voting process Partisan Attitudes: - Loyalties strongly influenced many of the specific political beliefs and behaviours of the citizenry - Party identification/partisanship - Not as common in Europe, though more independents in the uS The Learning of Partisanship: - Children learn party loyalty before they understand what the party labels stand for - Parents play a central role in socialisation of these values - Exposed to political cues - More party identity as you get older - PID most stable political attitudes across nations - Central element in an individual's belief system and a basis of political identity - Formed early in life and may condition later life learning The Impact of Partisanship: - Parties make politics used friendly - Party label: information shortcut - Party ties mobilise people to become politically active, encourages them to become active in political process to support his/her side - Party identification: affects voting choices: means that a voter has a predisposition to support his or her preferred party - Also close relationship between PID and voting in parliamentary elections - Partisanship is the ultimate heuristic as: 1. Creates basis of political identity 2. Provides cues for evaluating political events, candidates, and issues 3. Mobilises participation in campaigns and election turnout 4. Provides cues on voting preferences 5. Stabilises voting patterns for the individual and the party system Partisan Dealignment: - Party seems to be eroding - Deeper party loyaties are weakening - Negativity toward parties as political institutions - Public confidence in political parties lower - Public isn't developing party attachments The Consequences of Dealignment: - Decreased partisan-centered voting - Increased number of parties competing in parliamentary elections - Rise in split-ticket voting - Declining turnout - Change in how the public reaches its voting choices Causes of Dealignment: - Poor performance of parties - Poor performance: greater dealignment, though not that much - People's expectations about parties have changed - Declining function of parties as institutions: less support for them - Party leaders has some loss of control over some processes of the party - Changes in mass media: provide the information that parties used to provide Cognitive Mobilization and Apartisans: - Cognitive Mobilization thesis: accepts the importance of partisanship, but because the public's cognitive sophistication is growing, more people can deal with the complexities of politics without reliance on cues of heuristics - Focus on postmaterial values, moving away from parties - Growth of independents: concentrated among a distinct group of citizens: young, educated and adherents of postmaterial values - Some people orient themselves to politics based on their partisan attachments, some through cognitive mobilisation - Orient themselves to politics on their own - Thus: four types of citizens - Apolitical independents: neither attached to political party nor cognitively mobilised - Ritual partisans: mobilised primarily by parties - Cognitive partisans: mobilised by parties and cognitively - Apartisans: new independents, high levels of political involvement and sophistication, though they remain unattached to any political party - Cognitive mobilisation: transforming the characteristics of partisans
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Citizen politics (Dalton - Chapter 9)
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The Consensus Model of Democracy - Majoritarian interpretation of democracy: Government by the majority of people - Majorities should govern and minorities should oppose - Opposed by the consensus model of democracy - Lewis: All those affected by a decision should have the chance to participate in making that decision either directly or through chosen representatives -Winning parties may make all the governmental decisions and losers may criticise but not govern, the two meanings are incompatible - Majoritarians respond: Majorities and minorities can alternate in government - And: homogenous society: major parties are usually not very far apart in their policy outlooks because they stay close to the political centre - Government for the people rather than by the people - In less homogeneous societies: this would be undemocratic - In deeply divided societies, majority rule: majority dictatorship - Consensus model, explained in terms of ten elements in sharp contrast to majoritarian system - Consensus: shares, disperses, and restrains power in a variety of ways 1. Executive power-sharing in broad coalition cabinets: - Westminster: executive power in one party cabinets - Consensus: all or most of the important parties share executive power 2. Executive-legislative balance of power: - Consensus: separation of powers, more balanced cabinet-parliament relationship, give and take - Westminister: Dominant cabinet, dependent on the confidence of the legislature, executive dominates legislature 3. Multiparty system: - Consensus: More parties, due to plural societies, divided along several lines of cleavage (religion, class and language) - Westminster: Dual party system 4. Proportional representation: - Consensus: present in consensus, explains multiparty systems - Divide the parliamentary seats among the parties in proportion to the votes received - Westminster: overrepresents large parties, underrepresents small parties, majoritarian and disproportional electoral system 5. Interest group corporatism: - Consensus: liberal corporatism, tripartile concertation, few and large interest groups, peak associations - Westminster: pluralist 6. Federal and decentralised government: - Consensus: central government + regional governments = decentralisation - Federal - Westminster: Centralised and unitary government 7. Strong bicameralism: - Consensus: bicameralism: representation of minority, upper house elected on a different basis than the lower house, and has real power - Strong bicameralism - Westminster: Unicameralism 8. Constitutional rigidity: - Consensus: Rigid and difficult to amend - Westminster: Flexible, easily amended 9. Judicial review: - Consensus: Constitutional court - Westminster: Parliamentary sovereignty 10. Central bank: - Consensus: Independent of executive - Westminster: Dependent on executive
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Patterns of Democracy (Lijphart - Chapter 3)
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Where Is the Power?: - Parliamentary government - Executive powers linked to legislative powers - Executive elected by legislature - Leader of the party likely to serve as country's next executive/Prime Minister - Majoritarian - At least a majority of members of the lower house must at all times support the government - Two party system, though emergence of Liberal Democratic Party - If majority of MPs decide they no longer want current government to continue in office: remove government by a vote of no confidence or defeating a major government legislative proposal - Remaining PM requires continual support of Parliament - Government decisions must be made collectively and be supported by the entire cabinet - Collective responsibility - Allows executive to govern - If executive cannot command the acquiescence of the legislature it will cease to be the executive British Parliamentary Government: - Role of the opposition: oppose the government, present constructive alternatives - Exception of this: wars - Parliamentary government: party government - Parliament: institution in itself, but also arena where political parties clash - British parliamentary government: sovereign - No legal limitations on the powers of Parliament, and no means by which a citizen can challenge an act of Parliament as unconstitutional - Though, limitations on the discretion of Parliament through membership of EU - Its actions are law The Monarch: - The UK is constitutional monarchy, in which powers of the monarch are constrained by both law and convention - Royal assent is needed for legislation to become law - If there is no clear winner of who becomes PM, monarch may be able to choose one - Empowered to dissolve parliament if perhaps the government did not resign and call for elections after a vote of no confidence or if it lost on a major issue, though they could also refuse to do so - Must be unifying force when everything else in political system is centrifugal, divisive and adversarial - Monarch representative of the nation as a whole The Prime Minister: - The prime minister is head of the government of the day and its chief executive office - Role of prime minister becoming presidential: due to parliamentary campaigns have become directed toward electing a particular prime minister rather than a party (increased through Thatcher), staffing and organisation of the office (special assistants in departments), appointment of special advisors - Prime minister is the leader of the majority party in the House of Commons. Party selects potential prime minister - Prime minster is political leader within the House of Commons - Expected to win verbal jousts and lead parliamentary debates - Substantial powers: relationships between the monarch and Parliament are channeled through the Prime Minister - PM serves as chief political adviser to the monarch, especially on major issues such as the dissolution of parliament. Meet on a weekly basis. - While in office: considerable personal power over policy and the activities of the cabinet. In position to enforce his or her views over nominal equals - Leader of opposition also able to wield influence and power, must propose alternatives to government programs Cabinet: - Cabinet composed of the individuals who meet with the prime minster as a collectivity called the cabinet and who make collective policy decisions - Government: is more encompassing, including all ministers regardless of their seniority or degree of responsibility - Cabinet technically a committee of the government elected by prime minister. It is responsible to parliament, and cabinet members generally rise and fall as a unit - Distinction between secretaries of state and ministers is rather vague: Each tends to head a dept. of Government - Junior ministers are attached to a dept. to provide political and policy assistance in the management of the dept. - Minister: remains a member of the legislature and an active representative of a constituency and must fulfil various positions and responsibilities simultaneously, i.e: policies, cabinet meetings, must appear in Parliament, serve their constituents in the districts from which they were elected - Cabinet supported by Cabinet office Parliament: - Serious questions arisen about the real effective powers of Parliament - As executive grows, parliament less capable of exercising control over policies Members of Parliament: - Average MP represents 90,000 people - Few advantages - Some have sponsoring organisations - Corruption -> limiting of sponsors Organisation: - Both the house of Commons and the House of lords are involved in making policy, but Commons is crucial to forming govts. and setting public budget - House of lords is composed of the lords spiritual and the lords temporal - Lords temporal comprise hereditary and life peers - Lords spiritual: represents Church of England - HoL may not relay money bills longer than one month - Any legislation passed by the HoC in two successive sessions of Parliament goes into effect without approval from HoL - HoC: evolved over centuries and still reflects medieval roots - Arranged as two opposing ranks of benches - Informal debate, heckling - Partisan body and national institutions: Ideas of cabinet government and collective responsibility are closely allied with ideas of party government - MPs sometimes allowed to vote against party lines if interests go against their constituencies - Speaker of the House, impartial figure dressed in the style of the eighteenth century - Elected from the membership of the Commons for being someone who can be elected unanimously rather than produced by a partisan confrontation - May remain in office as long as he or she wishes, seat rarely contested. Votes only in cases of ties, though he traditionally votes to keep status quo - Decides which amendments to legislation will be debated - Smaller commissions below HoC, some special committees regarding legislation affecting i.e: Scotland - Other committees for monitoring and oversight - Parliament threatened as institution as it has had difficulty maintaining independent powers in the face of the growing powers of PM and cabinet. Most important weapons are in hands of the executive Local Government: - Not independent set of institutions with its own constitutional base of authority such as that found for states or provinces in a federal system - Local government: creation and the creature of the central government - Differs through Scotland, England and Wales - Large number of voters per councillor: loss of local democracy Quasi-Governmental Sector: - Semi-private semi-public enterprises such as the NHS, some independence from government
answer
Politics in Europe (Carman - Chapter 1.2)
question
Who Has the Power?: Political parties: - Catchall parties - Labour, Conservatives, Liberal Democrats The Party and Electoral Systems - Two and one half party system - Increasing citizens per seat Voting and Elections: - Elections for House of Commons: national - Parties control selection of candidates Partisan Choice by Voters: - Determined by Social class, patterns of residence, demography, issues
answer
Politics in Europe (Carman - Chapter 1.3)
question
- 24 June 2016 - 51.9% leave - British pound dropped to new 31 year low - David Cameron resigned - Not surprising: UK most Eurosceptic electorate, Conservatives opposed to EU, EU referendums unpredictable, Anti-establishment (fears of immigration) - Unique event - Referendum came about as the culmination of decades of internal division in the British Conservative party - To avoid voters to move to UKIP, conservatives pledged to hold a referendum - Government failed to win over voters with new settlement for Britain in the EU, though it was confident it could win the referendum - Boris Johnson: Out (cons.) - David Cameron: In (cons.) - Jeremy Corbyn: In (Labour) - Most of the campaign: remain - Though: Fluctuation in the last month of the campaign, where polls indicated Leave majority - Economy vs Immigration - In: economic stability - Out: authority, control, immigration - Beginning of the campaign: Economy - Towards the end of campaign: Immigration - Lack of trust on David Cameron - Value and belief approach: overall feelings towards EU - Second-order theory approach: show dissatisfaction towards government - Three main approaches to explaining variation in support for and opposition to European integration: 'utilitarian', 'identity', 'cue-taking' - Utilitarian: Since EU trade liberalisation favours citizens with higher levels of human capital and income, such individuals will be more supportive of the EU - Winners: more supportive - Left behind: less supportive - Identity also explains vote: territorial identity expect to vote out but multiple identities expected to vote in. - Citizens rely on 'cues' and proxis when forming opinions about the EU - Four set of factors shapes vote choices: socioeconomic factors, geographical identities, feelings about the domestic political establishment, and policy attitudes. - Socioeconomic factors: the better educated, young, and well-off are less likely to vote Leave compared to those 'left behind'. Big impact on education as indicator for vote - Geographical identities: European identity powerful predictor of Remain vote. British identity: opposite - Feelings about the domestic political establishment: Labour party voters more in favour of Remain, UKIP most likely to be Brexiteers, Scottish National Party more likely to remain - Policy attitudes: Issues mobilised in the campaign, such as economy and immigration, are highly correlated with vote choice. Those who felt immigration should be lowered voted Leave - Calls of referendums by populist Eurosceptic parties in countries post Brexit vote - In most countries: Support for the EU - Though, some divides in certain parties
answer
The Brexit Vote (Hobolt)
question
Policymaking Institutions: - At national level: Bundestag (federal parliament), lower house of parliament (Bundesrat) and executive (federal government - chancellor and cabinet) - 16 states constitute republic, they all have direct influence on national policy making through the Bundesrat. - Federal Constitutional Court: judicial review (important actor in policy process) - President: ceremonial head, above partisan political struggle - Some of German power controlled through EU institutions, i.e: European Court of Justice and European central bank The Federal Parliament (Bundestag): - Federal Parliament - Centre of policymaking - Legislative assembly - Elected every four years - Directly elected by the people Responsibilities: Legislation, election and control of gvt., supervision of bureaucracy and military, selection of judges of F.C. Court - Under Bismark, little power - Powers expanded under the Weimar republic (chancellor and cabinet directly responsible to it) - After WW2, parliament status and control grown - Responsibility for electing and controlling the government - Once government is elected, the government selects the federal chancellor - Controlled by: ability to request appearance of any cabinet or state official and similar to British style 'Question Hour' - Fraktionen - Seats distributed proportionally according to party strength - Most bills reported out in order to be amended or revised - When government discovers a bill is in trouble, bill is usually withdrawn for further study before a vote The Federal Council (Bundesrat): - Federal council - Interests of the states in the national policymaking process - 69 members drawn from sixteen states - Each state entitled to three to six members - 1969, Bundesrat no longer a ''watchdog'' over Bundestag - As a result: ''divided government'' (majority in Bundestag but not in Bundesrat) - I.e: 1969 to 1982 CDU/CSU union blocked most of proposals involving divorce, abortion, etc - 1991 onwards, SPD now became opposition party- progress on policies - But after 1999, Government had divided once more - State leaders can quickly go against party if it affects their region - Bundesrat veto can be overridden by majority two-thirds in Bundestag The Chancellor and the Cabinet - Chief executive of the Federal Republic is the chancellor - Less powerful than the US president, yet a chancellor has more authority and is more difficult to remove than a PM in British model. - President was previously powerful, but Basic Law framers sought to avoid a repetition of this problem by concentrating executive authority in the chancellor - Power of the chancellor: constitution, party system and precedents established by the first chancellor - Chancellor responsible for determining the main guidelines of the government's policies, so they're above ministers - Qualifications of members play role in selection - Constructive vote of no confidence: allows a parliament to withdraw confidence from a head of government only if there is a positive majority for a prospective successor. Vote of confidence: enables chancellors to strengthen their position by stabilising the governing majority. If he/she loses though, new elections can be triggered/resignation is possible 'Chancellor Democracy' - Term given to bureaucracy Konrad Adenauer (first chancellor) introduced to his government. - Parliamentary system with a strong, quasi-presidential executive. From Adenauer to Kiesinger - Adenauer chancellorship: economic miracle, integration of refugees, membership in the European Community, alliance with the US - Use powers to his fullest extent: He led. Little consultation. - Showed Germans that liberal republic could be efficient - Replaced by Erhard after his terms; he was dropped after Federal Republic suffered economic recession, replaced by Kiesinger - Kiesinger: Grand Coalition government with the SPD. Failed to get enough votes, passed from the national scene The First Social Democratic Chancellors: Brandt and Schmidt - Willy Brandt: new foreign policy (reconciliation with Germany's eastern neighbours, Ostpolitik). Treaties with Soviet Union and other Communist states - Began Détente - Image that Germany had overcome totalitarianism - Schmidt: economist - Came in time of Arab oil embarge of 1973, but he managed to control inflation and unemployment. Continued Ostpolitik on a lower scale. - Failed to appease left aspects of his own party - Unable to avoid worldwide recession of second oil price shock in 1979 - Replaced by Kohl in 1982 after losing majority Helmut Kohl - Intervention of East German elections in 1990 - Success of Alliance for Germany - Five step plan of integration for East Germany - December 1990 election in all of Germany, first free vote in all of Germany since 1932 - Liked more by Easterners: promise of economic prosperity - Four straight elections won - higher taxes in an attempt to improve East, recession in economy: lost majority in 1997 Gerard Schröder - First Chancellor of the 'Berlin Republic' - 1998-2005 - Incumbent government replaced - SPD and Green party coalition - Tax reform in 2000 - Couldn't help unemployment growth, by 2005 1 million unemployed - Credited for taking independent stance towards USA Angela Merkel: Chancellor for 'Hard Times'? - CDU/CSU coalition with SPD would only be possible with their own chancellor as head. - Merkel prevailed - Promised cuts in social programs, tax subsidies, increase value added tax -Economic recovery, reduce debt - Had to mediate to appease coalition - Job creation, health care reform and stability of European monetary system moved up on her agenda as her ratings dropped Formal Policymaking Procedures - Most legislation drafted in the ministries of the national gvt and submitted to the parliament for action - State governments and both houses of parliament can also submit legislative proposals - administrative regulations and legal ordinances do not require parliament consent, but if they affect states, they must be approved by the Bundesrat -Before a bill is submitted to parliament, is is approved by cabinet (government), then passed to Bundesrat, and the Bundestag considers it as well - After approval by Bundestag, the bill goes back to Bundesrat for a second reading The Judiciary (Germany) - Local, regional and state courts - Court systems specialising in labour, administration, tax, etc - German legal codes - The judge only administers and applies the codes, fitting the cases - Judge is neutral administrator of the codes - Inquisitorial system - Conventional/conservative values Justice in East Germany - After unification, many East German judges dismissed - Different conventions The Federal Constitutional Court - Independent of any justice ministry - Decisions on controversial political cases - Criticised for becoming too political
answer
Politics in Europe (Carman - Chapter 3.2)
AP Government
Coal And Steel
Comparative Politics
Less Developed Countries
The House Of Commons
United States Government-Comprehensive
AP Gov Unit 4: – Flashcards 32 terms

James Storer
32 terms
Preview
AP Gov Unit 4: – Flashcards
question
A parliamentary as opposed to a presidential system is found in all of the following countries except:
answer
France
question
If the president selected his cabinet from the same source as a prime minister in a parliamentary system does, the U.S. cabinet would be selected by:
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Congress
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In a parliamentary system, the voters cannot choose:
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The prime minister
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Each of the following is a fundamental difference between presidents and prime ministers except:
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presidents choose their cabinets from inside rather than outside Congress
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An obvious and important difference between a president and a prime minister is that the latter always has:
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majority support in parliament
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Unlike a prime minister, the president selects his cabinet officers and advisers to:
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reward personal followers
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If you are an ambitious member of the British Parliament, prudence will dictate that you:
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avoid displeasing the leader of your party
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Presidents, even with great majorities of their own party in Congress, experience difficulty in exercising legislative leadership because:
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the president is unable to control Congress, unlike a prime minister.
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With substantial Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress,President Kennedy, during the last year of his presidency, was able to secure passage of ________ of his proposals.
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only one-fourth
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Of the twenty-four congressional or presidential elections between 1952 and 1996, ________ produced a divided government.
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15
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The text cites the 1946 Marshall Plan and the Tax Reform Act of 1986 to illustrate that:
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both were produced by divided governments.
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The text cites Jimmy Carter's strategic arms limitation treaty and Bill Clinton's policy on gays to illustrate that:
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unified governments do not guarantee that presidential legislative initiatives will be carried out.
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The text observes that the delegates to the Constitutional Convention feared:
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monarchy and anarchy about equally.
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An aspect of George Washington's personality that encouraged the delegates to the Constitutional Convention to approve an elected presidency was his:
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self-restraint
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If the Framers had decided to have the president chosen by the Congress, we could reasonably expect Congress to dominate the president:
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or the president to corrupt the legislature
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Each of the following was one of the fears expressed by the Founders about aspects of the presidency except:
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the fear of a president's using his position to shape public opinion.
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One of the fears expressed by the Founders about aspects of the Presidency was the fear of a president's:
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using the militia to over power state governments
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One of the fears expressed by the Founders about aspects of the presidency was the fear of a president's
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being corrupted by, or corrupting, the Senate.
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Alexander Hamilton stood at the Constitutional Convention and gave a five hour speech calling for:
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an elective monarchy.
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The cause of those who argued for a single, elected president at the convention was, no doubt, aided by the fact that:
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everybody assumed that George Washington would be the first president.
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One concern expressed at the Convention focused on the possibility that shared powers would cause the president to be a mere "tool" of:
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the Senate
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The House of Representatives has _________ to decide the winner of a presidential election.
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rarely had
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When no candidate receives a majority of votes in the electoral college, the House of Representatives decides who will win a presidential election. This circumstance:
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has occurred only twice.
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The first plan suggested at the Convention called for the president to be chosen by:
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Congress
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The second plan that was suggested at the Convention for the selection of the President called for selection by:
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direct vote of the people
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The concern about the presidency that was most vigorously debated by the Framers was over the president's:
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use of bribery or force to ensure reelection
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The concern shared by the Framers about the popular election of presidents was that it might:
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give inordinate power to larger, more populous states.
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Under the original provisions of the U.S. Constitution, the states were to choose presidential electors:
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however they wish.
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The Framers assumed that, under the electoral college system, most presidential elections would be decided in the House. Why did this not turn out to be the case?
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because political parties ended up playing a major role inproducing nationwide support for a slate of national candidates
question
Regarding terms of office, the pattern among most early presidents was to
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serve two terms and then leave office.
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Presidents have been limited to two terms by the:
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Twenty second Amendment.
question
The legitimacy of the office of president was aided during the years of the first presidents by which of the following?
answer
the appointment of people of stature to federal offices
AP Government
Comparative Politics
First Past The Post
Free Rider Problem
National Rifle Association
Political Behavior
AP Government Chapter 7 81 terms

Brandon Ruffin
81 terms
Preview
AP Government Chapter 7
question
The political party for which one or one's amily usually votes
answer
Party identification
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Differences in ooliticak views between men and women
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Gender gap
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Differences in political preferences based in more than one variable
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Crosscutting cleavages
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Term to describe the children of parents who participated in radical movements of the 1960s
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Red diaper babies
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A coherent and consistent set of beliefs about who ought to rule, what principles rulers should obey, and what policies they ought to pursue
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Political ideologiy
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People who have a disproportionate amount of political power
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Political elites
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Researcher who found differences in political opinion were closely associated with occupation of the 1950s
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V. O. Key
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Process by which personal and other background traits influence one's views about politics and government
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Political socialization
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Features interviews with voters on Election Day in a representative sample of districts
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Exit polling
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A standard right or proper conduct that helps determine the range of acceptable social behavior and policy options
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Norm
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Refers to the degree to which a person's opinions are consistent across time, or from one issue to the next at any given point in time
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Ideological constraint
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A survey of public opinion
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Poll
question
The first major U.S. politician to refer to himself as a \"conservative\"
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Barry Goldwater
question
A sample selected in such a way that any member of the population being surveyed has an equal chance of being interviewed
answer
Random sample
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The difference between the results of two surveys or samples
answer
Sampling error
question
What percentage of college students were of the opinion that we should begin to withdraw from Iraq?
answer
60%
question
What opinions did the college students express with respect to religion and moral direction of the country
answer
70% said religion was a important part of their life and 54% were concerned with the moral direction of the country
question
Who would win the votes of college students in a presidential race between Republican John McCain and Democrat Hillary Clinton
answer
The respondents in the survey had the same level of support for both candidates, 40%
question
What percentage of the general public strongly agrees with the position that prayer in schools violates the Constitution?
answer
21%
question
The majority of which religious group strongly agrees with the position that prayers in schools violates the Constitution
answer
Jewish (62%)
question
How does the American public feel bout having a \"moment of silence\" in schools
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53% support the ideas
question
Who was more likely to see the war in Iraq as an issue of importance?
answer
Women
question
Who was more likely to see Social Security as an issue of importance?
answer
Women
question
What is the largest gap for issue importance between men and women?
answer
Health Care (13 points)
question
What percentage of registered voters is categorized as \"liberals\"?
answer
19%
question
What percentage of registered voters is some form of \"conservative\"?
answer
38%: Conservative Democrats (15%) + Social Conservatives (13%) + Pro-Government Conservatives (10%)
question
Which party's members appear to be closer to the views of all registered voters on the topic of allowing gays and lesbians to marry legally?
answer
They are 14% points above or below the figure for all registered voters
question
Which party's members are more likely to describe themselves as \"conservative Christians\"?
answer
Republicans (66%)
question
Which party's members appear to be closer to the opinions of all registered voters on the topic of whether or not we should have used military force against Iraq?
answer
The Democrats appear to be 7% points closer opinions of all registered viters
question
The public supported the Equal Rights Amendment, but it was not ratified
answer
T
question
The Framers of the Constitution did not try to create a government that would do from day to day \"what the people want\"
answer
T
question
Studies of the public opinion in the 1940s found most citizens had high levels of knowledge about government and policy
answer
F; The vast majority knew next to nothing about government and had only vague notions even on much publicized public policy matters that affected them directly
question
Since 1952, the major polls have a modest record with respect to predicting the winner in presidential elections
answer
F; Every major poll has correctly picked every winner in such races
question
The majority of young people identify with their parents' political party
answer
T
question
The proportion of citizens who consider themselves Democrats or Republicans has steadily increased since the 1950s
answer
F; the proportion of Independents has increased. Democrats and Republicans have decreased
question
Younger voters have weaker sense of partisanship than older ones
answer
T
question
\"Red-Diaper Babies\" are the sons and daughters of 1950s conservatives
answer
F; they are the sons and daughters of 1960s radicals
question
Studies suggest religious influences on public opinion are most pronounced with respect to economic issues
answer
F; religious influences are most pronounced in social issues
question
The gender gap is not evident in midterm elections
answer
F; it did not assert itself for some time but, today, it is also evident in midterm elections
question
Women are much more likely to think that all handguns should be banned
answer
T
question
The gender gap is a recent phenomenon in American politics
answer
F; the gap has been around for a long time
question
Today, there is evidence to suggest that college students are more conservative than they were 20 years ago
answer
T
question
Today's college students are much more likely to read newspapers and magazines
answer
F; they are less likely to read newspapers and magazines
question
Most blue-collar workers in Great Britain think themselves as \"middle class\"
answer
F; they consider themselves working ckass
question
In the United States, public opinion is less divided by class than it is in Europe
answer
T
question
Class voting has declined in France, Great Britain, and Germany since the 1940s
answer
T
question
African Americans are overwhelmingly Democrats
answer
T
question
Asian Americans tend to identify with the Republican Party
answer
T
question
Korean Americans tend to identify with the Republican Party
answer
T
question
Korean Americans tend to appear to be more liberal than Japanese Americans
answer
T
question
Latinos from Mexico are more likely to be Democratic than those from Cuba
answer
T
question
The South has, on the whole, been less accommodating to business enterprises than other regions
answer
F; the south has been more accomodating
question
The better informed people are about politics and the more interest they take in it, the less likely they are to have consistently liberal of conservative views
answer
F; with higher levels of information typically comes higher levels of ideological constraint
question
Ronald Reagan was the first presidential candidate to declare himself a \"conservative\"
answer
F; Barry Goldwater was the first
question
Clinton won presidency in 1992 and 1996 without carrying the south
answer
T
question
Delegates to the presidential nominating conventions tend to be more ideological than the average voter
answer
T
question
According to the text, elites do not define economic problems
answer
T
question
What goal is not listed in the preamble to the constitution
answer
Equality (Justice, domestic tranquility, common defense, and general welfare all are)
question
Which is intended to serve as a check on public opinion
answer
Representative government, federalism, separation of powers, an independent judiciary
question
The Framers understood that _____ would be the chief source of opinion on most matters
answer
Factions and interest grouos
question
The classic research on Monetary Control Bill suggests we should be cautious in how we think about polling because respondents will
answer
Express opinions about things that do not even exist
question
A properly conducted poll of 250 million people can capture \"public opinion\" with as few as
answer
1,500 people
question
Research indicates over half of children identify with their partisan preferences if at least one of their parents by the time they are
answer
In the fifth grade
question
In adulthood, people whose party identification differs from their parents usually call themselves
answer
Independents
question
In recent years the influence of the family on party identification has
answer
Decreased
question
Younger Americans are more likely than older Americans to support
answer
Gay marriage, vouchers for private or religious schools, women's rights, letting citizens invest some of their Social Security contributions in the stock market
question
The transfer of political beliefs form generation to generation does not appear in large national studies of political attitudes because
answer
Few Americans are either far left or far right of the political spectrum
question
The \"gender gap\" refers to the tendency of female voters to _____ in recent elections
answer
Support democratic candidates
question
The authors suggest the most plausible explanation of the gender gap is
answer
The fact that men have \"deserted\" the democratic oarty
question
Which of the following statements regarding the behavior of males and females since 1980 is correct
answer
Females have voted at a somewhat higher rate
question
There is much research which indicates attending college tends to make people more ____ than the general population
answer
Liberal
question
Students attending more prestigious or selective colleges are more ______ than the general population
answer
Liberal
question
The political liberalizing effects of college among older Americans were probably attributable to the fact that yesteryear's college graduates
answer
Read newspapers and magazines
question
In a classic study by V.O. Key in the 1950s differences in political opinion were closely associated with
answer
Occupation
question
When political scientists see how accurately they can predict a person's view on one issue based on views on a different issue, then the focus is on
answer
Constraint
question
In a typical ideological self-identification survey, the largest group of Americans will
answer
Classify themselves as moderate
question
In a typical ideological self-identification survey, the smallest group of Americans will
answer
Refuse to classify themselves in any manner
question
The terms liberal and conservative are _____ political elites
answer
Very meaningful for
question
Which group displays the most consistency I political attitudes
answer
Political activists
question
The rate at which governments adopt policies supported by majorities in polls
answer
Has decreased
question
Which of the following is incorrect assessment of elite opinion
answer
Elites are unified in interests and opinions
Comparative Politics
Per Capita Income
State Sponsored Terrorism
PS 204 Chapter 7 Flashcards Answers 239 terms

Steven Colyer
239 terms
Preview
PS 204 Chapter 7 Flashcards Answers
question
The modern concepts of revolution and terrorism can be first traced back to which important modern event?
answer
french revolution
question
Nihilism is in large part a belief that all institutions and values:
answer
are essentially meaningless
question
Some warn that too much centralized power to fight terrorism could lead to:
answer
a surveillance state
question
In which of the following ways does a coup d'état differ from a revolution?
answer
Elites are the agent of change
question
States most often engage in state-sponsored terrorism as a means of:
answer
influencing foreign policy
question
Political violence is defined as:
answer
violence outside of state control that is politically motivated
question
Guerrilla war can be defined as:
answer
the use of violence by nonstate actors who accept the traditional rules of war and target the state in order to achieve a political goal
question
Terrorism can be defined as:
answer
the use of violence by nonstate actors against civilians in order to achieve a political goal
question
In which of the following ways do institutional explanations of political violence differ from ideational explanations?
answer
They tend to be more particularistic
question
Studies of the relationship between economic conditions and terrorism find that:
answer
there is not a strong correlation between economic deprivation and terrorism
question
Individual-focused studies of terrorism, noting in part the emphasis on community and purity of cause, have drawn comparisons between terrorist groups and:
answer
religious cults
question
It has been argued that the 1979 Iranian Revolution and the 2011 Egyptian Revolution are examples of which model of revolution?
answer
relative deprivation model
question
Which of the following could be categorized as an individual explanation for political violence?
answer
humiliation
question
The statement \"one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter\":
answer
runs against a core purpose of political science, which is to define terms objectively
question
In the third phase of their evolution, such as in the work of Theda Skocpol, studies of revolutions have:
answer
shifted their emphasis from the public to the state
question
War crimes and human rights abuses can be defined as:
answer
the use of violence by states against civilians in order to achieve a political goal
question
Once considered relatively unusual, military rule became much more common over the past 50 years, particularly in:
answer
Africa and Latin America
question
A system wherein authoritarian regimes sanction a limited number of organizations to represent the public (and restrict unsanctioned ones) is known as:
answer
corporatism
question
Which of the following characteristics is an illiberal regime likely to have in common with a democratic one?
answer
The executive, legislature, and judiciary are established and have their respective arenas of authority
question
Communist countries are examples of which form of authoritarianism?
answer
one-party rule
question
Countries that appear to have many of the trappings of democracy but restrict the democratic process to a great degree are known as:
answer
illiberal or hybrid regimes
question
In which of the following ways does clientelism differ from corporatism?
answer
Clientelism relies on individual patronage rather than on large organizations
question
As a political system, totalitarianism is:
answer
rare
question
A nondemocratic regime in which holy texts or religious law form the foundation for its rule would be known as:
answer
a theocracy
question
When a system in which individuals outside an organization are brought into a beneficial relationship with it, making them dependent on the regime for certain rewards, it is known as:
answer
co-optation
question
Which of the following represents a challenge to the behavioral revolution's assertion about the relationship between nondemocratic rule and modernization?
answer
Modernization's disruptive process can lead to nondemocratic rule
question
Bureaucratic authoritarianism often justifies military rule by asserting that:
answer
only technocratic leadership can rise above \"irrational\" politics
question
Which of the following best characterizes the \"Asian values\" argument?
answer
Asia has cultural and religious traditions that encourage conformity and obedience, making it less receptive to democracy
question
Which of the following is among the characteristics that have led some to consider Russia to be a bureaucratic authoritarian regime?
answer
The head of government and top rulers came into their positions from the military or security services
question
Which of the following statements about populism is accurate?
answer
Populist movements are often led by a charismatic leader
question
Which term refers to a military seizure of the government?
answer
coup d'état
question
Which of the following is the best example of a country that could be described as a theocracy?
answer
Iran
question
What is the chief advantage that a categorization using \"developed,\" \"communist/postcommunist,\" and \"developing\" might have over the \"three worlds\" model?
answer
It allows for the possibility that a country might transform and take on a new designation.
question
In terms of political structure and public participation, in which of the following ways are the United States and France similar?
answer
They rely on some form of single-member-district plurality or majority to elect their legislatures.
question
The process by which states pool their sovereignty, surrendering some individual powers in exchange for some political, social, or economic benefits, is known as:
answer
integration
question
Which of the following is a core component of the European Union?
answer
the European Parliament
question
Which of the following best characterizes the role of freedom across developed democracies?
answer
There are significant differences in the definitions and applications of civil rights and liberties
question
Which of the following best describes the nature of integration as it has developed in the European Union?
answer
It grew to its present state through a series of incremental agreements negotiated over several decades, including as recently as the 2000s
question
Which of the following statements about European Union expansion in recent decades is accurate?
answer
Expansion has been accompanied by immigration westward and company relocation eastward.
question
The European Union was created as a response to the:
answer
destruction caused by World War II.
question
Which of the following statements about developed democracies is accurate?
answer
A relatively small agricultural sector is common among developed democracies.
question
An economy based primarily on the service sector is known as:
answer
postindustrial.
question
Germany, Canada, and the United States are comparable in ________ but very different in ________.
answer
level of economic development; their Gini index measure of inequality
question
Many now speak of the European Union as a body that has become:
answer
supranational.
question
Which of the following is the best-known example of the process of integration?
answer
the formation of the European Union
question
Which of the following is currently a major source of contention in the European Union?
answer
future membership for Turkey
question
In which of the following countries is increased multiculturalism most likely to be a source of explosive fear and negative reaction?
answer
France
question
Many suggest that developed democracies are undergoing significant social, political, and economic changes, becoming:
answer
postmodern.
question
The process by which powers are sent down to local levels of government is known as:
answer
devolution.
question
Which of the following describes a major contradiction faced by developed democracies in their attempts to maintain the welfare state?
answer
The problem could be mitigated by accepting more immigrants, but that creates a new problem because citizens are largely unwilling to extend benefits to immigrants.
question
Postindustrialism most threatens the economic security of:
answer
the less educated
question
During the Cold War, the developed democracies were commonly referred to by scholars as the:
answer
first world
question
Skepticism toward technological innovation characterizes ________ views.
answer
postmodern
question
Which of the following describes a likely characteristic of postindustrial societies?
answer
more devolution of economic power
question
Japan provides a uniquely extreme example of which of the following issues in the transition of developed democracies?
answer
population aging and homogeneity that threatens the welfare state
question
The viability of the welfare state is most challenged by:
answer
increasingly old populations
question
A small province in a large European country feels that its ethnic and cultural heritage differs substantially from that of the country to which it belongs. The executive petitions the central government to allow the province to gain control over the design and writing of textbooks that are administered in its schools, a power formally held by the central ministry of education. The request is granted. This process would be categorized as:
answer
devolution.
question
The \"cabinet\" of the Communist Party as developed in the Soviet Union is generally known as the:
answer
Politburo
question
The ________ is the name Marx chose for the system of economic production, including the level of technology (the \"means of production\").
answer
base
question
The term used to describe Marx's conception of historical change is:
answer
dialectical materialism
question
Under communism, ethnicity and nationalism were:
answer
suppressed
question
Which of the following statements about the privatization and marketization of countries transitioning from communism is accurate?
answer
Inflation and hyperinflation were fears of those that advocated a gradual approach to marketization
question
Which of the following represented the chief executive position in a communist country based on the Soviet model?
answer
general secretary
question
Politically sensitive or influential jobs in the state, reserved for people approved by the Communist Party as developed in the Soviet Union, are known as:
answer
nomenklatura.
question
Which of the following is an accurate description of some component of communist government in the Soviet Union?
answer
Some unions were allowed to operate outside of the state, though they were linked to the Communist Party.
question
The bourgeoisie are the:
answer
property-owning middle class
question
Postcommunist economic reform has been most successful in:
answer
Eastern Europe and the Baltics.
question
In which of the following ways has China's transition from the communist model differed from that of Russia?
answer
It has sought economic change with little or no political change.
question
One of the challenges in putting Marx's ideas into practice has been that:
answer
he left no specific outline for how communism would be built.
question
Which of the following statements about communism in China under Mao is accurate?
answer
Mao sought to destroy the power of the party-state in order to expand the Communist regime.
question
For most of his career, Marx generally argued that communist revolution was most likely in:
answer
countries where capitalism was most advanced
question
How did Marxist theory change the lives of women in most communist countries?
answer
Women were given greatly expanding workforce and educational opportunities.
question
Which of the following statements about religions and their contribution to new identities around the world is accurate?
answer
The Chinese government has tried to battle religious growth by promoting Confucian ideals and practices.
question
For Marxists, socialism represents:
answer
a transitional phase before communism
question
Which of the following statements about gender and LGBT rights and equality in former communist or eastern European countries is accurate?
answer
While some Central European states allow for same-sex partnerships, discrimination against the LGBT community has actually grown in Russia and Central Asia
question
The individual primarily associated with articulating the political theory of communism is:
answer
Karl Marx.
question
Which of the following has served as a major source of attraction for followers of communism?
answer
the promise of economic equality
question
In which of the following ways did Lenin's beliefs about communism differ from those of Marx?
answer
He argued that revolutions could take place in less advanced countries.
question
Marx's name for all human institutions, including religion, the state, politics, and gender, is the:
answer
superstructure.
question
How have current governments in Russia and China responded to growing nationalism in their countries?
answer
They have promoted nationalism as a means of maintaining legitimacy.
question
In which of the following ways do postcommunist success stories like Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic differ from countries with less successful records like Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia, and Serbia?
answer
They have a greater precommunist history of healthy civil society.
question
Gorbachev's perestroika was concerned with:
answer
institutional economic and political reforms
question
The untaxed, unregulated, and unprotected sector of the economy is known as the ________ economy.
answer
informal
question
Countries that are experiencing weak economic and political development are known as ________ countries.
answer
lower income
question
Countries that are experiencing rapid economic growth and democratization are generally known as ________ countries.
answer
middle income
question
Which of the following best describes modernization under imperialism in most colonial states?
answer
incomplete transition between Western and traditional institutions
question
Import substitution is most closely related to which of the following political-economic systems?
answer
mercantilism
question
Why might the commonality of authoritarian regimes in the developing world fail to suggest high levels of autonomy, even though on the surface it appears that this should be the case?
answer
These regimes often lose their independence through corruption to groups that exploit them as a resource.
question
The concept of a \"hothouse economy\" is associated with:
answer
import substitution.
question
Which of the following might be a Washington Consensus policy recommendation to a less developed country that would be opposed by a supporter of import substitution policy?
answer
reducing state power
question
A system wherein a state extends its power in order to directly control territory, resources, and people beyond its borders is known as:
answer
imperialism.
question
Which of the following best describes social identities in places under imperial control?
answer
Neither strong national nor strong, specific ethnic identities were present before imperialism.
question
Which postcolonial region currently suffers the lowest rankings on the Human Development Index?
answer
Africa
question
Policies supported by the IMF and World Bank to increase economic liberalization in less-developed countries are often referred to as the:
answer
Washington Consensus
question
Which of the following can be said about the effects of imperialism on gender roles?
answer
It is difficult to generalize about the effects on gender roles, but in many countries imperialism likely made gender roles more fixed.
question
Which of the following statements about the United Nation's Millennium Development Goals (MDG) program is accurate?
answer
Lack of proper, comprehensive data collection has left wide disagreement over whether or not the program has been a success.
question
One recent innovation to help alleviate poverty in poorer countries through small loans to small businesses is known as:
answer
microcredit.
question
The borders of most current African states were drawn by colonial powers according to:
answer
longitude and latitude
question
Many countries in Asia discarded import substitution and opted for a form of economic development after World War II known as:
answer
export-oriented industrialization
question
Which of the following was the initial, primary cause of lack of government capacity in postcolonial countries?
answer
the absence of a professional bureaucracy
question
A small country has applied for membership in an economic union. Before membership is granted, the ruling body of the union requires that the applicant state reduce its budget deficit to a specific percentage of GDP. This type of arrangement could be classified as:
answer
conditionality.
question
One of the major criticisms of microfinance or microcredit is that:
answer
the loans do not help grow businesses that can hire employees.
question
South Korea is among the Asian countries that pursued an export-oriented strategy known as:
answer
the product life cycle
question
Some observers of less-developed countries use the term ________ to describe the unequal economic relationship between those countries and advanced democracies in the modern postcolonial era.
answer
\"neocolonialism\"
question
Which of the following is a component of import substitution, an economic strategy followed by many developing countries in the post-World War II era?
answer
poor enforcement of intellectual property rights
question
In comparing the development of postcolonial countries, which of the following pairs of factors have shown strong correlation with each other?
answer
abundant natural resources and weak economic development
question
Organized life outside of the state that is often seen as critical to democracy and political stability is known as:
answer
civil society.
question
Which of the followings statements about the extent of globalization is accurate?
answer
In 2013, nearly a quarter of a billion people moved across international borders.
question
According to political scientists Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye, what is the relationship between globalization and history?
answer
Globalization is \"thick\" compared to the international connections of the past.
question
Which of the following ultimately resulted from the establishment of the Bretton Woods system?
answer
establishment of the World Trade Organization
question
Which of the following statements about aspects of Bretton Woods and the Washington Consensus is accurate?
answer
A core goal of Bretton Wood was to help manage economic relations between countries, and the Washington Consensus advocated a reduction of states' control over the market.
question
According to the 2010-14 World Values Survey, ________ showed less mistrust of nationalities than ________.
answer
respondents over 50; respondents under 29
question
In which of the following ways does the study of societal globalization differ from that of political globalization?
answer
It focuses on the formation of civil society that stretches beyond borders.
question
Greenpeace is a good example of:
answer
a nongovernmental organization.
question
In his work The Economic Consequences of the Peace, the economist John Maynard Keynes describes a period that seems to have many similarities to the current state of globalization. Which of the following is that period?
answer
the period before World War I
question
One important impact of globalization on the study of politics is that:
answer
it blurs the lines between domestic politics and international relations.
question
Political globalization has the most potential to lead to:
answer
weakening state autonomy and capacity
question
Optimists believe that societal globalization, through a process of \"creative destruction,\" could lead to a form of:
answer
global cosmopolitanism
question
Rather than a universal process of economic deepening across the globe, much of what we think of as globalization is simply the:
answer
integration of China into the global market.
question
Call centers and data processing are examples of what is known as:
answer
offshore outsourcing
question
In what way is the Internet unlike a typical international regime?
answer
It has no norms that lead to a specific goal
question
In which of the following ways has sovereign authority reasserted itself over the last decade?
answer
censorship of Internet web sites by some states
question
Critics of globalization speak of the problem of a \"democratic deficit,\" meaning:
answer
the movement of power toward international organizations may reduce public representation and control.
question
Globalization is associated with the growing power of a host of nonstate or supra-state entities. What are the three major categories that these entities fall into?
answer
multinational corporations, nongovernmental organizations, intergovernmental organizations
question
In the process of historical globalization, the late nineteenth century saw the rise of the first:
answer
NGOs and IGOs.
question
In which of the following ways did the Bretton Woods system differ from the Washington Consensus?
answer
It placed less emphasis on the promotion of international trade
question
The experiences of the WTO in 1999 and 2008 suggest which of the following?
answer
an increase in antiglobalization activism
question
The liberalizing view of globalization suggests that it will be a:
answer
mechanism for future prosperity.
question
Which of the following best describes a major concern of those who believe globalization will be detrimental to social progress?
answer
Globalization will inspire a backlash against cultural exports that will reduce the capacity of MNCs to operate globally.
question
What aspect of globalization first came into being in the late nineteenth century?
answer
the first NGOs and IGOs
question
Which of the following statements about the growth (or lack of growth) of globalization is accurate?
answer
Despite predictions to the contrary, global inequality has remained steady or grown slightly over the last three decades.
question
In which of the following ways are the new violent international actors empowered by globalization similar to IGOs and MNCs, and in which way are they dissimilar?
answer
similar in that they are decentralized; dissimilar in that they hold territory
question
Comparative politics
answer
is the study and comparison of domestic politics across countries
question
international relations
answer
examines relations between countries.
question
Power
answer
is the ability to influence others or impose one's will on them.
question
Comparative method
answer
is a way to make comparisons and draw conclusions across case studies
question
inductive reasoning
answer
using case studies to generate a hypothesis
question
deductive reasoning
answer
research that works from a hypothesis and tests this with data
question
multicausality
answer
when variables interconnect and interact to produce particular outcome
question
selection bias
answer
focusing on an area because of the convenience of travel or knowledge of its language and not others
question
endogeneity
answer
the difficulty in separating causes and effects
question
modernization theory
answer
as societies developed they would become capitalist democracies, converging around a set of shared values and characteristics
question
behavioral revolution
answer
the subject of investigation shifted away from political institutions toward individual political behavior
question
Legitimacy
answer
defined as the idea that something or someone is recognized by the public as right and proper—grants states the authority and power to act.
question
traditional legitimacy
answer
built on history and continuity
question
charismatic legitimacy
answer
built on a foundation of highly institutionalized laws
question
federalism
answer
where significant powers reside in regional or local authorities
question
asymmetric federalism
answer
has an uneven distribution of power
question
unitary states
answer
holds most of their power in a central government
question
devolution
answer
the \"pushing down\" of power. From federal government to the state or from the state to the city
question
capacity
answer
its ability to wield power to carry out policies or actions
question
autonomy
answer
its ability to wield that power without having to consult the public or another outside body
question
ethnicity
answer
a set of institutions that bind people together through a common culture
question
national identity
answer
a set of institutions that bind people with political aspirations
question
political ideologies
answer
are values help by individuals on the fundamental goals of politics
question
radicals
answer
argue for dramatic, sometimes revolutionary change of the current political and economic order
question
liberals
answer
also argue for change, but, unlike radicals they believe change can come within existing political structures -favor free markets (the principle of laissez-faire) and strong protections of for private property
question
conservatives
answer
do not see change as necessary and argue that the current systems and structures are working
question
reactionaries
answer
seek to restore current political and economic structures to previously established ways. While their goals differ, the approaches of radicals and reactionaries are often similar
question
liberalism
answer
holds that politics should seek to achieve the highest level of freedom for all people -emphasizes individual freedoms over collective equality and the power of markets over the state
question
communism
answer
seeks to achieve equality through state control of economic resources
question
social democracy or socialism
answer
hopes to achieve economic equality, but strives to do so through private ownership and market forces -emphasizes capitalism; however argue that markets should be checked by the state and that the state should provide more public goods
question
fascism
answer
rejects freedom and equality, arguing instead for hierarchal divisions between people
question
anarchy
answer
rejects the notion of government altogether
question
fundamentalism
answer
is an ideology that seek to unite religion with the state
question
political economy
answer
the study of how the relationship between politics and economics shapes the balance of freedom and equality
question
neocorporatism
answer
a economic model that is followed by some social democracies that allows a limited number of business, labor and other social groups to work with the state
question
mercantilism
answer
focuses economic growth to increase the power of the state
question
parastatals
answer
partial state ownership of specific industries
question
Gini index
answer
a mathematical formula that measures inequality and poverty
question
human development index
answer
measures the overall well-being of a country's people
question
economic liberalization
answer
cutting taxes, reducing regulation, privatizing state-owned businesses and public goods and expanding property rights
question
liberal democracy
answer
a political power exercised either directly or indirectly through participation, competition and liberty
question
republicanism and separation of powers (Roman empire)
answer
representation of the public through elected officials and power sharing between institutions
question
bicameral or unicameral
answer
legislatures with two branches or a single branch
question
constituencies
answer
electoral boundaries
question
single-member district (SMD)
answer
each constituency is allocated one seat in the legislature and the candidate or party who wins the most votes in that district wins the seat
question
proportional representation (PR)
answer
use multimember districts (MMD) and seats in the legislature are allocated according to the proportion of votes the party receives
question
mixed electoral system
answer
a mix of PR and SMD to try and balance the benefits and tradeoffs of these two systems
question
referendum
answer
where a policy is place on the ballot and voted on by the people
question
initiative
answer
where the people gather signatures in order to place a policy on the ballot for a vote
question
nondemocratic regimes (authoritarianism)
answer
are those controlled by a small group of individuals who exercise power over the state without being constitutionally responsible to the public
question
totalitarianism
answer
is a form of non democratic rule involving a highly centralized state with a strong ideology that seeks to transform and fuse the institutions of the state, society, and economy
question
populism
answer
an anti-institutional ideology. It does not guarantee an antidemocratic outcome, but it can destabilize democratic practices and provide a foundation for antidemocratic leaders to come to power
question
coercion
answer
compelling individuals by threatening harm to their life or livelihood
question
surveillance
answer
watching the population and punishing those who criticize the state
question
co-optation
answer
bringing outsiders into a beneficial relationship with the regime
question
corporatism
answer
the state controls and approaches all social and economic institutions
question
clientelism
answer
the state provides favors to people who offer support
question
patrimonialism
answer
the leader, in return for obedience, provides benefits to a small group of supporters
question
coup d' état (military rule)
answer
wrests the power of the government and usually restricts civil liveries and bans political parties
question
bureaucratic authoritarianism
answer
a regime that asserts that a technocratic leadership forced on objective, rational and technical expertise can solve the problems of a country without public participation
question
one-party rule
answer
is the situation in which one party monopolizes over with other parties banned or excluded from power
question
theocracies
answer
meaning that faith is the foundation the political regime and affects nearly all political decisions and institutions
question
illiberal or hydrid regimes
answer
are those that contain institutions that seem democratic by are not respected or seen by the people as legitimate or effective
question
politcal violence
answer
is violence outside of state control and is politically motivated
question
ideational
answer
explanations focus on the effect of political, religious ideas in causing political violence
question
relative deprivation model
answer
argued that revolution occurred when there was a gap between public expectations and actual conditions in a country
question
state-sponsored terrorism
answer
occurs when a state directly supports terrorism and as an instrument of foreign policy
question
guerrilla war
answer
involves violence by non state actors targeting the state
question
developed democracies (first world)
answer
are countries with institutional democracy and a high level of economic development and prosperity
question
modern
answer
that is, secular, technological, bureaucratic, rational, materialistic and placing greater emphasis on individual freedom than on collective equality
question
postmodern
answer
culture that emphasizes \"quality of life\" considerations over material gain
question
integration
answer
blurring the lines between countries by creating common policies, rules and tighter connections
question
European union (EU)
answer
found in the aftermath of WW2 was the first intergovernmental system -today it includes 28 members
question
supranational system
answer
a system where sovereign powers are shared among the members and held by EU institutions over the member states themselves
question
postindustrialism
answer
economies based, not on the manufacture of tangible goods, but rather on the service sector (finance, real estate, education and health care)
question
base
answer
the economic system of society, made up of technology and class relations between people
question
superstructure
answer
institutions like religion, culture and national identity
question
dialectical materialism
answer
Marc believed that human history moved through a series of phases and that economic conflict lead to revolutions that would move the world from feudalism though capitalist democracy and ultimately a communist utopia
question
bourgeoisie
answer
the property owning class
question
proletariat
answer
working class
question
vanguard of the proletariat
answer
a small revolutionary movement that would seize power on behalf of the people
question
nomenklatura
answer
positions given by the government to people in exchange for loyalty to the party
question
politburo
answer
the cabinet
question
central committee
answer
the legislature
question
part-state
answer
is a system in which power flows directly from the ruling political party to the state, bypassing government structures
question
central planning
answer
where the state bureaucracy controlled the type and amount of goods produced
question
glasnost
answer
openness to public debate
question
perestroika
answer
actual institutional reform
question
middle-income
answer
newly industrializing countries (NICs) have shown swift economic development, social stability and greater democratization
question
lower-income
answer
less-developed countries (LDCs) display weak economic growth and political and social instability
question
imperialism
answer
is the system whereby a state extends its power to directly control terrify, resources and people beyond its borders
question
colonialism
answer
involves greater degree of physical occupation of a territory by settlers of the military
question
neocolonialism
answer
economically, newly industrializing and less-developed countries were still depended upon their former empires
question
import substitution
answer
restricting imports in favor of locally produced goods, a policy that had little success and was criticized as prone to corruption
question
export-oriented industrialization
answer
focuses on producing good that could be exported
question
structural adjustment programs (Washington Consensus)
answer
dictated by the World Bank and IMF. Policies required the privatization of industries, shifts toward more open markets, and more encouragement of foreign investment; -these reforms have been controversial and theirs results have been mixed
question
informal economy
answer
it is not regulated or taxed by the state
question
microcredit
answer
providing small loans to local people to allow them to start businesses
question
microfinance
answer
a broader spectrum of services, including credit, savings, insurance and financial transfers
question
globalization
answer
the process of expanding and intensifying linkages among states, societies, and economies
question
multinational corporations (MNCs)
answer
are firms that produce and market goods in more than one country
question
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)
answer
are national and international groups, apart from any state, that focus on specific policy goals
question
intergovernmental organizations (IGOs)
answer
include groups like the United Nations and the EU and are created by states to focus on certain policies
question
international regime
answer
defined as the fundamental rules and norms of politics, which make up a set of institutions that empower and contain states and governments
question
bretton woods system
answer
a post war economic regime (associated with the Washington Census) created to expand economic relations and promote trade liberalization 3 important institutions emerged: -international monetary fund (IMF) -general agreements on tariffs and trade (GATT) -which was later replaced by the world trade organization (WTO)
question
foreign direct investment
answer
the purchase of assets in a country by a foreign firm
question
offshore outsourcing
answer
the process by which a firm moves its work to a secondary business in order to lower costs or increase production
Civil Liberties
Comparative Politics
Decision Making
Introductory Sociology
Sociology
Soc: Chapter 10 (Macro-Micro Link in social institutions) – Flashcards 66 terms

Marguerite Castillo
66 terms
Preview
Soc: Chapter 10 (Macro-Micro Link in social institutions) – Flashcards
question
a form of government in which representative democracy operates under the principles of liberalism, i.e. protecting the rights of the individual, which are generally enshrined in law.
answer
liberal democracy
question
urban dictionary: Creating the impression of public support by paying people in the public to pretend to be supportive. The false support can take the form of letters to the editor, postings on message boards in response to criticism, and writing to politicians in support of the cause. - this is the opposite of grassroots ( genuine public support of an issue)
answer
astroturfing
question
Social institutions are paradoxical for sociologists because a. they function at the macro level to shape our everyday interactions. b. our everyday interactions help to construct social institutions. c. they impact our everyday interactions and our everyday interactions also impact them.
answer
c
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The ability to impose one's will on others is called a. power. b. the government. c. politics. d. authoritarianism.
answer
a
question
T/F: Charter schools are public schools run by private entities intended to give parents greater control over their children's education
answer
T
question
Consider the three major theoretical perspectives routinely explored throughout the text. Which theoretical perspective might note that most positions of importance in the U.S. are held by a small concentrated group of men and thus, men wield the most power in decision making, while the masses, in turn, have little power in this process? a. structural functionalism b. conflict theory c. symbolic interactionism
answer
b
question
Arthur does not leave his house each morning until after he puts on his chain with the Star of David on it. This exemplifies his a. extrinsic religiosity. b. intrinsic religiosity. c. extrinsic spirituality. d. intrinsic spirituality.
answer
a
question
T/F: The largest religious group in the United States is Catholic
answer
F
question
- systems and structures that shape the activities of groups and individuals in society - can't be visited - it is a structure, not a place. Politics, education, and religion are examples
answer
Social institutions
question
the methods and tactics of managing a nation or state, as well as administering and controlling its internal and external affairs
answer
politics
question
the formal, organized agency that exercises power and control in modern society, especially through the creation and enforcement of laws
answer
government
question
levels of government in the U.S.
answer
federal, state, county, local, and so on
question
the ability to impose one's will on others
answer
power
question
the noncoercive, legitimate exercise of power
answer
authority
question
a system of government by and for a small number of elites that does not include representation of ordinary citizens
answer
authoritarianism
question
one form of an authoritarianism system; usually a dictator does not gain power by being elected or through succession but rather seizes power and becomes an absolutist ruler
answer
dictatorship
question
the most extreme and modern form of authoritarianism, in which the government seeks to control every aspect of citizens' lives
answer
totalitarianism
question
government by a king or queen, with succession of rulers kept within the family
answer
monarchy
question
two types of monarchies
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absolute and constitutional
question
typically have complete authority over their subjects
answer
absolute monarchies
question
royal figures whose powers are defined by a political charter and limited by a parliament or other governing body
answer
constitutional monarchies
question
a political system in which all citizens have the right to participate
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democracy
question
a system of political power where a wide variety of individuals and groups have equal access to resources and power
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pluralism
question
the two theories of who rules America
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pluralist theory of power and the power of the elite
question
- term coined by C. Wright Mills - a relatively small number of people who control the economic, political, and military institutions of a society
answer
power elite
question
organizations that raise and spend money to influence elected officials or public opinion
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special interest groups
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- also impacts politics - ex. many people form their beliefs based on information from opinion leaders
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mass media
question
high-profile people who interpret events and influence the public.
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opinion leaders
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the process by which a society transmits knowledge, values, and expectations to its members so they can function in society
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education
question
________ serves a number of important functions for society: - The transmission of knowledge - Learning to follow society's rules and to respect authority - Being socialized to develop other qualities that will eventually make people efficient and obedient workers
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schooling
question
an obvious function of education ex. transmission of knowledge, like read, write, math, etc.
answer
manifest function
question
ex. learning to follow society's rules and to respect authority, and being socialized to develop other qualities that will eventually make us efficient and obedient workers. These goals aren't on the class syllabus, but students learn them through interactions with teachers and others within the system
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latent function
question
Educational institutions also help to reproduce the ______ seen in society
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inequality
question
describes the values and behaviors that students learn indirectly over the course of their schooling because of the educational system's structure and teaching methods
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hidden curriculum
question
Randall Collins argues that reproducing society's existing class structure is the true function of education
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"The Credential Society" (the book)
question
the idea that teachers' attitudes about their students unintentionally influence their academic performance
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pygmalion effect
question
this study suggested that teachers' attitudes about their students unintentionally influenced their academic performance. When teachers expected students to succeed, the students indeed tended to improve.
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Rosenthal and Jacobson's symbolic interactionist study of education
question
contends that because schools are funded by local property taxes, children in poor neighborhoods are trapped in poor schools, which reinforces inequality
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Kozol's ethnography, "Savage Inequalities"
question
Many believe that America's ______ system is in crisis, though there is little agreement on how to fix the problem. Some attempts have included early college high schools, homeschooling, school vouchers, and charter schools
answer
educational
question
institutions that blend high school and college into a coherent educational program in which students earn both a high school diploma and two years of college credit toward a bachelor's degree
answer
early college high schools
question
the education of children by their parents, at home - has grown steadily in popularity since the 1980s. In 2007-2008, it was estimated there were more than 2 million of these students
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homeschooling
question
T/F: The academic achievement of home-schooled students, on average, was significantly above that of publicly schooled children, even if their parents were not certified teachers
answer
T
question
payments from the government to parents whose children attend failing public schools to help parents pay for private school tuition
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school vouchers
question
public schools run by private entities to give parents greater control over their children's education
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charter schools
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includes any educational course or program in which the teacher and students do not meet together in the classroom, a situation increasingly available over the internet
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distance learning
question
includes any institutionalized system of shared beliefs and rituals
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religion
question
propositions and ideas held on the basis of faith
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beliefs
question
practices based on those beliefs that identify a relationship between the sacred (holy, divine, or supernatural) and the profane (ordinary, mundane, or everyday)
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rituals
question
T/F: Sociologists do not evaluate the truth of any religion, but rather study the ways that religions shape and are shaped by cultural institutions and the ways that religions influence and are influenced by the behaviors of individuals
answer
T
question
- Shapes everyday behavior by providing morals, values, rules, and norms for its participants - Gives meaning to our lives - Provides the opportunity to come together with others to share in group activities and identity
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religion
question
Religion can be made _______ by promoting inequality with sexist, racist, or homophobic doctrines. On the other hand, religious organizations have also been ______ of social justice and political change.
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dysfunctional, agents
question
In the Civil Rights era, most communications about gatherings, protests, or events to raise awareness were announced and advertised through churches.
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example of religion as agents of social justice and political change
question
the regular practice of religious beliefs, measured by church attendance. - Thirty-eight percent of Americans report attending services weekly
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religiosity
question
refers to a person's public display of commitment to a religious faith
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Extrinsic religiosity
question
refers to a person's inner religious life or personal relationship to the divine
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intrinsic religiosity
question
the two religious groups that have dramatically increased in size in recent decades
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fundamentalists and unchurched
question
those who literally interpret texts and want to "return" to a time of greater religious purity
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fundamentalists
question
those who consider themselves spiritual but not religious, and who often adopt aspects of various religious traditions
answer
unchurched
question
an important part of the structure of our society. As a sociologist, it is important to understand how these shape our lives, and how we can shape these as well!
answer
Social institutions
question
The ability to impose one's will on others is called a. the government. b. politics. c. power. d. authoritarianism.
answer
c
question
The placement of students into different educational programs of study such as remedial classes or college-prep classes is called a. tracking. b. intrinsic education. c. the hidden curriculum. d. simulacrum.
answer
a
question
The values or behaviors that students learn indirectly over the course of their schooling because of the educational system's structure and teaching methods are called a. tracking. b. intrinsic education. c. the hidden curriculum. d. simulacrum.
answer
c
question
Public schools run by private entities to give parents greater control over their children's education are called a. charter schools. b. early college high schools. c. home schools. d. tracking schools.
answer
a
question
Attendance at a religious service is an example of _____ religiosity. a. intrinsic b. secular c. liberation d. extrinsic
answer
d
question
The practice of emphasizing literal interpretation of religious texts and a "return" to a time of greater religious purity is called a. fundamentalism. b. liberation theology. c. secularization. d. intrinsic religiosity.
answer
a
question
There are millions of people who are eligible to vote in the United States. What percentage of those people do you think usually come out to the polls for a presidential election? close to 100 percent not 100 percent, but over 75 percent around 50 percent less than 25 percent
answer
c
AP Comparative Government And Politics
AP Government
Comparative Politics
AP Comparative Government Vocabulary – Flashcards 160 terms

James Storer
160 terms
Preview
AP Comparative Government Vocabulary – Flashcards
question
Accountability
answer
the concept that public officials serve at the pleasure of the citizens
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Advanced Democracies
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countries that have well established democratic governments and a high level of economic development
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Anarchists
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feel that the government should not exist and that humans should live in a free system of natural selection and natural communities with no regulation or leadership system; Anarchism—like communism believes that private property and capitalism create inequality; like liberalism, Anarchism places a high value on individual political freedoms
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Associational Group
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groups that support political contenders or become contenders themselves
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Asymmetrical Federalism
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a system of governance in which political authority is shared between a central government and regional or state governments, but where some sub-national units in the federal system have greater or lesser powers than others.
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Authoritarian
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A system of power of rule in which power depends on popular legitimacy but on the coercive force of political authorities; a regime where decisions are made by political elites without much input from citizens
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Authority
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the legal right to exercise power
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Autonomous Republics
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a territorial unit in the Soviet Union that was a constituent unit of the union republic within which it was located.
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Bicameral
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two houses; a legislative assembly with two houses/parts
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Bourgeoisie
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used to describe owners of factories and other means of production in the "The Communist Manifesto"
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Bureaucracy
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a system of public administration; a hierarchical organization charged with carrying out the decisions of those who have political authority
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Cabinet
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an important collective decision-making body; contains leaders ("ministers" or "secretaries") from all of the major departments of the executive branch
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Capitalism
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system of production based on private ownership and free markets
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Cartel
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a group of producers that, individually are unable to dominate a market, but in collaboration with one another can; can control prices by limiting supplies (ex. OPEC—Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries)
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Charismatic Leader
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someone who exerts power/authority based on their dynamic personality
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Civil Service
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government workers, hired by the government to prepare and carry out legislation
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Civil Society
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refers to the space occupied by voluntary associations outside the state, for example, professional associations, trade unions, student and women's groups, religious bodies and other voluntary association groups; the organization outside of the state that helps citizens define and advance their own interests
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Cleavages
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when national, ethnic, linguistic, and religious systematically affect political allegiances and policies,
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Cross-Cutting Cleavages
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occur when the various factors that make up an individual's social identity tend to pull that person in different political directions; same groups of people find themselves on an opposite side of a different issue; if groups share a common interest on one issue are likely to be on opposite sides of a different issue
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Cumulative Cleavages
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when the same groups of people are against each other on many issues; they pit the same people against each other on many different issues
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Polarizing Cleavages
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occur when the factors composing one's social identity tend to pull in the same political direction
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Political Cleavages
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when a political system is affected by more than one such cleavage; it matters whether the different cleavages are cumulative or cross-cutting
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Social Cleavages
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divisions theoretically outside the realm of politics (religion, ethnic groups, race, social and economic classes) that interact with the political system and have a tremendous impact on policy-making
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Clientelism
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an informal aspect of policy making in which a powerful patron offers resources such as land, contracts, protection, or jobs in return for the support and services of lower-status and less powerful clients; the state provides benefits to groups of its political supporters
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Collectivization
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a process undertaken in the Soviet Union under Stalin in the late 1920's and the early 1930's and in china under Mao in the 1950's, by which agricultural land was removed from private ownership and organized into large state and collective farms.
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Comparative Politics
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examines political realities in countries all over the world. It looks at many ways governments operate and the ways people behave in political life
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Command Economy
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State-planned production; a form of socialism in which government decisions rather than market mechanisms (such as supply and demand) are the major influences in determining the nation's economic direction; also called central planning; socialist economies in which centralized planning and state ownership are guiding economic principles
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Communism
answer
a system of social organization based on the common ownership and coordination of production; a theory of government developed by Karl Marx in the 19th century in which the communist party controls everything from the government to the economy to social life; generally values equality over freedom
question
Communist Manifesto
answer
book written by Karl Marx in 1848 that said that the gap between rich and poor in the capitalist countries would grow so big that the proletariat would revolt against the bourgeoisie (owning class) and establish a new world in which social class would disappear because would disappear because ownership of private property would be banned
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Comparative Advantage
answer
the ability to produce a particular good or service more efficiently than another countries ability to produce the same thing
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Conditionality
answer
When Western powers attach strings (conditions) to their assistance in global affairs
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Confederal System
answer
spreads the power among many sub-units (such as states) and has a weak central government (ex. United States under the Articles of Confederation)
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Conflictual Political Culture
answer
the citizens are sharply divided, often on both the legitimacy of the regime and solutions to major problems
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Consensual Political Culture
answer
citizens tend to agree on the appropriate means of making political decisions and to agree on the major problems facing the society and how to solve them
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Consensus
answer
widespread, general agreement
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Conservativism
answer
a belief that is much less supportive of change in general that are radicalism and liberalism
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Constitution
answer
Basic rules concerning decision making, rights, and the distribution of authority in a political system; highest, most authoritative law
question
Constitutional Monarchy
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when the monarch is kept in check by a constitution or rule of law
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Cooptation
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allocation of power throughout various political, economic, and social institutions; members of the public are given beneficial relationship with the state/government; examples: corporatism, clientelism, rent seeking and/or personality cult
question
Corporatism
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an arrangement in which government officials interact with people/groups outside the government before the set policy; citizen participation is channeled into state-sanctioned groups
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Coup d'état
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these replace the leadership of a country with new leaders; leaders are removed and replaced by force; a sudden and decisive action in politics, especially one resulting in a change of government illegally or by force
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Deflation
answer
too many goods chasing too little money
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Democracy
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a regime that bases its authority on the will of the people
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Democratic Centralism
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a system of political organization developed by V.I. Lenin and practiced with modifications, by all communist-party states; rule by a few for the good of the many; type of government Lenin established in Russia in 1917
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Democratization
answer
the transition from non-democratic to democratic forms of government; spread of representative government
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Dependency Theory
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holds that economic development of many countries in the world is blocked by the fact that industrialized nations exploit underdeveloped nations
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Devolution
answer
delegation of decision making to lower (more local) levels of government
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Direct Democracy
answer
citizens may be able to share directly in debating, deciding, and implementing public policy; usually found in small political systems; a form of democracy where individuals have immediate say over many decisions that the government makes
question
Direct Taxes
answer
personal and corporate income taxes and taxes on capital gains and wealth
question
Distribution
answer
when the government gives away; distributes throughout society
question
Egalitarian
answer
each member of the legislative chamber or court has the same voting power
question
Elite Recruitment
answer
ways to identify and select people for future leadership positions
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Empirical Data
answer
factual statements and statistics that allow political scientists to study different countries
question
Ethnicity
answer
a form of group identification or distinctiveness often based on a more common biological ancestry in the distant past; more accurately, it is typically based on the belief in such a common biological ancestry the specific attributes that make one group of people culturally different from others; examples: customs, language, religion, region and history
question
Fascism
answer
a political ideology that rejects individual freedom and equality and accepts the idea that people and groups exist in degrees of inferiority and superiority; like communism, is hostile to the idea of individual freedom but rejects the notion of equality
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Federalism
answer
A system of governance in which political authority is shared between the national government and regional or state governments. The powers of each level of government are usually specified in a federal constitution; a regime in which public authority is shared by national and local governments
question
"First-Past-the-Post"(Plurality)
answer
an electoral system where the constituencies are divided into single-member districts in which candidates compete for a single representative's seat; the winner does not need a majority to win, but simply needs to get more votes than anyone else
question
Fragmentation
answer
divisions based on ethnic or cultural identity
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Free Trade
answer
International commerce that is relatively unregulated or constrained by tariffs (special payments imposed by governments on exports or imports).
question
Fusion of Power
answer
A constitutional principle that merges the authority of branches of government, in contrast to the principle of separation of powers. In Britain, for example, Parliament is the supreme legislative, executive, and judicial authority. The fusion of legislature and executive is also expressed in the function and personnel of the cabinet; regime in which all or most authority is by one element of government
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Gini Index
answer
the most commonly used measure of economic inequality in which perfect equality is scored 0 and perfect inequality is 100
question
Globalization
answer
refers to the growing interconnectedness of governments, non-state actors, and populations throughout the world through a variety of political, economic, technological, cultural, environmental, and other interactions; increasing worldwide interdependence; phenomenon where international forces shape politics in the context of rapidly expanding and intensifying set of links among states, societies, and economies
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Government
answer
a reference to the leadership and institutions that make policy decisions for a country
question
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
answer
the total value of goods and services produced by a country's residents in a given year; GDP per capita divides the Gross Domestic Product by total population
question
Head of Government
answer
deals with the everyday tasks of running the state, and usually directs the activities of other members of the executive branch
question
Head of State
answer
a role that symbolizes and represents the people, both nationally and internationally, and may or may not have any real policy-making power
question
Hegemonic Power
answer
A state that can control the pattern of alliances and terms of the international order, and often shapes domestic political developments in countries throughout the world.
question
Hyperinflation
answer
inflation that is more than 50% a month for more than 2 months in a row; occurs when government lacks tax revenues needed to carry out basic tasks
question
Ideology
answer
a coherent set of ideas and guidelines that defines what the nature and role of government should be and prescribes the main goals the people should pursue through political action
question
Illiberal Democracy
answer
tends to restrict civil freedoms; democracies that have regular, free, and fair competitive elections but lack the other elements of a liberal democracy; retains the basic structures of a democracy but does not protect civil liberties
question
Import Substitution
answer
policy to encourage domestic production of goods and services
question
Indirect Rule
answer
a term used to describe the British style of colonialism in Nigeria and India which local traditional rulers and political structures were used to help support the colonial governing structure.
question
Indirect Taxes
answer
include sales and value-added taxes, excise taxes, and custom duties
question
Inflation
answer
too much money chasing after too few goods; prices begin to rise and money loses its value
question
Insider Privatization
answer
a term used in relation to Russia to refer to the transformation of formerly state owned enterprises into joint-stock countries or private enterprises in which majority control of the enterprise is in the hands of employees and/or managers of that enterprise.
question
Institutional Group
answer
Interest aggregators meant to enforce policies set by higher authorities or negotiate between different groups (ex. military or bureaucratic factions)
question
Institutions
answer
stable, long lasting organizations that help to turn political ideas into policy (examples: bureaucracies, legislatures, judicial systems, and political parties)
question
Interest Aggregation
answer
activity in which the political demands of individuals and groups are combined into policy programs; becomes powerful when backed by votes, money, seats in legislature, armed force, or media access
question
Interest Articulation
answer
methods by which citizens express their opinions and desires to the government
question
International Politics
answer
concerns the relations between countries
question
Jihad
answer
"struggle" all though often used to mean armed struggle against unbelievers, it can also mean spiritual struggle for more self-improvement.
question
Judicial Review
answer
the mechanism that allows courts to review laws and executive actions for their constitutionality
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Labor Unions
answer
an organization of wage earners or salaried employees for mutual aid and protection and for dealing collectively with employers
question
Laissez-faire
answer
the economy should be "allowed to do" what it wishes; state should only intervene to defend public when crises arises
question
Legitimacy
answer
a belief by powerful groups and the broad citizenry that a state exercises rightful authority; belief that a regime is proper or a government has the right to exercise public authority
question
Liberal Democracy
answer
tends to emphasize the freedom of the individual (ex. intellectual and religious freedoms, freedom of speech, etc.); democracies that display civil liberties, rule of law, neutrality of the judiciary, open civil society, and civilian control of the military
question
Liberalism
answer
a political ideology that places emphasis on individual political and economic freedom; a type of change that supports reform and gradual change rather than revolution; emphasis on individual freedoms over collective equality and on power of markets over state
question
Libertarian
answer
Individuals who apply the theory of natural rights to all; Their problem with government is that it denies these natural rights as it takes on more jobs/roles in the community
question
Majoritarian Two Party Systems
answer
Systems dominated by mainly two parties and that have election laws that give legislative control to one of the two parties
question
Maoism
answer
shares Marx's vision of equality and cooperation, but also emphasizes Mao Zedong's belief in preserving China's peasant-based society
question
Market Economy
answer
an economy that allocates resources through the decentralized decisions of many firms and households as the interact in markets for goods and services
question
Market Reform
answer
a strategy of economic transformation embraced by the Yeltsin government in Russia and the Deng government in china that involves reducing the role of the state in managing the economy and increasing the role of market forces.
question
Marxism
answer
variation of communism based on the ideas of Karl Marx
question
Marxism-Leninism
answer
variation of communism based on the ideas of Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin
question
Military Regime
answer
the institution of military dominates politics (ex. Nigeria under military rule of Babangida and Abacha)
question
Monarchy
answer
when the ruler ascends to the throne via heredity
question
Monopoly
answer
exclusive control of a commodity or service in a particular market; a single producer of a good or service that is able to dominate the market; can control prices by limiting supplies (ex. Microsoft)
question
Multinational Corporations (MNCs)
answer
firms that produce, distribute and market goods or services in more than one country; as a result of globalization these are increasingly powerful
question
Multiparty Systems
answer
ensures that no single party wins a legislative majority by having combinations of parties and election laws
question
Nation
answer
a group of people who identify themselves as belonging together
question
Nationalism
answer
the sense of belonging and identity that distinguishes one nation from another
question
Newly Industrializing Countries (NICs)
answer
countries that are experiencing rapid economic growth and have shown tendencies toward democratization and political and social stability
question
Night Watchman State
answer
a state primarily concerned with regulation aimed at preserving law, order, and commerce and the protection of it's citizens.
question
Nomenklatura System
answer
a system of personal selection under which the communist party maintained control over the appointment of important officials in all spheres of social, economic, and political life; the process of filling influential jobs in the state, society, of the economy with people approved and chosen by the communist party
question
Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOs)
answer
a private group that seeks to influence public policy and deal with certain problems that it believes are not being adequately addressed by governments.
question
Non-tariff Barrier
answer
limit imports through methods other than taxation (examples: health and safety regulation)
question
One Party State
answer
is dominated by a strong political party that relies upon a broad membership as a source of political control
question
Parliamentary Regimes/Systems
answer
Two interdependent branches in which only the legislature is elected, and the executive rises from the legislature. The head of the executive branch is the prime minister and his/her cabinet. Usually, neither branch has a fixed term, but a member of the cabinet can be voted out at any time (vote of confidence); a form of democracy where citizens vote for legislative representatives, who in turn select the leaders of the executive branch
question
Patrimonialism
answer
a system of governance in which a single ruler treats the state as personal property.
question
Patron-Client Networks
answer
an informal aspect of policy making in which a powerful patron offers resources such as land, contracts, protection, or jobs in return for support and services; relationship between powerful people seeking support and less powerful people seeking benefits
question
Plurality
answer
the largest number of votes received in an electoral contest
question
Police State
answer
regulates much more intrusively and extracts resources more severely
question
Political Culture
answer
public attitudes toward politics and their role within the political system; refers to the collection of political beliefs, values, practices, and institutions that the government is based on
question
Political Efficacy
answer
the ability to influence political outcomes
question
Political Elite
answer
those that hold political power in a regime
question
Political Ideologies
answer
sets of political values held by individuals regarding the basic goal of government and politics; universal sets of political values regarding the fundamental goals of politics; it describes an ideal balance between freedom and equality
question
Political Recruitment
answer
process by which people become participants in and leaders of political action
question
Political Socialization
answer
how individuals form their political attitudes and then, collectively, how citizens form their political culture
question
Post-Modernism
answer
a set of values that emphasizes quality of life over concern with material gain which include the preservation of the environment and the promotion of health care and education
question
Prebendalism
answer
patterns of political behavior that rest on the justification that official state offices should be competed for and then utilized for the personal benefit of officeholders as well as of their support group or clients.
question
Presidential System
answer
a form of democracy where citizens vote for legislative representatives as well as for executive branch leaders; the two branches function with a separation of power
question
Privatization
answer
the sale of state-owned enterprises to private companies or investors. Those who support the policy claim that private ownership is superior to government ownership because for-profit entities promote greater efficiency.
question
Proletariat
answer
term used to describe workers and laborers; first articulated in Karl Marx's "The Communist Manifesto"
question
Proportional Representation
answer
the country is divided into a few large districts and the number of legislative representatives won by a party depends on the proportion of votes it receives (ex. 10% of the votes gives a party 10% of the legislative seats); system in which parties are represented in government to the degree they are successful in winning votes
question
Public Goods
answer
those goods, provided or secured by the state, available for society and indivisible (cannot be owned by any one individual or group); examples: national defense, roads; some goods, such as air and water quality, are essential to all of society but not easily provided by the market
question
Public Policy
answer
authoritative decisions that governments make
question
Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
answer
a statistical tool that estimates the buying power of income across different countries by using prices in the United States as a benchmark; attempts to estimate buying power of income in each country by comparing similar costs using prices in the US as a benchmark; a mechanism that attempts to estimate the real buying power of income in each country
question
Pyramid Debt
answer
a situation when a government or organization takes on debt obligations at progressively higher rates of interest in order to pay off existing debt.
question
Quotas
answer
limit the quantity of a good coming into the country
question
Radicalism
answer
a belief that rapid, dramatic changes need to be made in the existing society, often including the political system
question
Reform
answer
a type of change that does not advocate the overthrow of basic institutions; reformers want to change some methods that political and economic leaders use to reach goals that the society generally accepts
question
Regime
answer
the rules that a state sets and follows in exerting its power; these occur when a country's institutions and practices carry across time
question
Regulation
answer
the exercise of political control over the behavior of individuals and groups in the society; rules or orders that set boundaries of a given procedure
question
Regulatory State
answer
evolved in many advanced modern societies in response to the growing complexity of modern life
question
Religious Fundamentalism
answer
when major beliefs reassert themselves against expressions of modernity; widespread throughout the world
question
Rents
answer
above-market returns to a factor of production. Pursuit of economic rents is profit seeking that takes the form of nonproductive economic activity.
question
Rent-seeking Behavior
answer
the practice of political leaders who, for the purposes of remaining in positions of power, "rent" public assets to patrons who profit from those public assets; government allows its supporters to occupy positions of power in order to monopolize state benefits
question
Representative Democracy
answer
Policy-making power is designated to officials that are elected through elections by the citizens; usually found in large political systems
question
Republic
answer
a political system in which public officials are chosen by citizens
question
Revolution
answer
a type of change that implies a change at a more basic level and does not involve either a major revision or an overthrow of existing institutions
question
Rule of Law
answer
states government cannot take action that has not been authorized by law and citizens can only be punished for violating existing laws; a system that attempts to protect the rights of citizens from arbitrary and abusive use of government power; it supersedes the actions and statements of individual rulers
question
Self-determination
answer
the right of a sovereign state or an ethnic or other group that shares cultural and historical ties to live together in a given territory and in a manner they desire.
question
Separation of Power
answer
An organization of political institutions within the state which the executive, legislature, and judiciary have autonomous powers and no one branch dominates the others. This is the common pattern in presidential systems, as opposed to the parliamentary systems, in which there is a fusion of powers.
question
Single Member District Plurality (SMDP)
answer
"first-past-the-post" rule states that in each district, the candidate with the most votes, but not necessarily the majority, wins the election
question
Sovereignty
answer
possessing the highest level of independent legal authority
question
State
answer
all people and groups that have power to effect change
question
Structural Adjustment Programs (SAP)
answer
economic reform programs focusing on economic liberalization
question
Supranational Organization
answer
organizations that go beyond national boundaries; organizations that operate above governments; NATO, the European Union, NAFTA, OPEC, the United Nations, etc.
question
Tacit Social Contract
answer
an idea put forth by some western analysts that an unwritten Informal understanding existed between the population and the party/state in the post- Stalinist Soviet Union, which helped form the basis of social and political stability.
question
Tariffs
answer
taxes on imported goods
question
Theocracy
answer
a state run by religious authorities (ex. Iran); a rare form of government through the one that characterizes present day Iran, a leader claims to rule on behalf of God (ex. in Iran, the idea of Jurist Guardianship gives the Supreme Leader and other high-ranking clerics divine right to rule and/or interpret legislation)
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"Third World" Nations
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term used to describe countries that did not fit into the first two categories of the "three-world" approach and were all economically underdeveloped and deprived
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Totalitarian Regime
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feature a strong official ideology that seeks to transform aspects of the state, society, and the economy, using organizations and/or force; attempts to control all aspects of society
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Trade
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state management of sale of goods and services domestically AND internationally; tools of trade regulation: tariffs, quotas, non-tariff barrier
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Unemployment
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part of labor force without work buy available and seeking employment
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Unfinished State
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a state characterized by instabilities and uncertainties that may render it susceptible to collapse as a coherent entity.
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Unicameral
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one house; usually refers to a legislature that consists of only 1 house/part
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Unitary State
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By contrast to the Federal systems, where power is shared between the central government and state or regional governments, in a unitary state (such as Britain) no powers are reserved constitutionally for sub-national units of government.
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Vanguard Party
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a political party that claims to operate in the true interests of the group or class it purports to represent, even if this understanding doesn't correspond to the expressed interests of the group itself; a group of revolutionary leaders who could provoke the revolution in non-capitalist Russia
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Welfare State
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engages itself extensively in distributive activities to provide for the health, education, employment, housing and income support of its citizens
A Level History
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AP Comparative Government Chapter 4: Russia – Flashcards 162 terms

Anthony Richie
162 terms
Preview
AP Comparative Government Chapter 4: Russia – Flashcards
question
Soviet Union collapsed, reverberations heard around the world, left the Russian federation as the largest piece
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1991
question
former member of the Soviet Politburo who declared the end of the old Soviet-style regime, first president of Russian Federation, shock therapy, uneven leader who used authoritarian rule, small group of family members
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Boris Yeltsin
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reforms put in place by Boris Yeltsin that pointed the country in the direction of democracy and free-market economy
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Shock Therapy
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form of government in which a few people have the power, Yeltsin created one using family
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Oligarchy
question
elected two times, often acted aggressively in containing oligarchs' political and economic powers, increased centralization of powers, stepped down after two terms honoring Constitution of 1993, more conservative than Yeltsin
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Vladimir Putin
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Putin's successor, hand-picked
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Dmitri Medvedev
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a small group of men who climbed the ranks of the party
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Politburo
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an ordered path from local party soviets to the commanding heights of leadership
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Nomenklatura
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was at low ebb in beginning of 21st century, regime change, drastic departure from past hurt, Putin has stabilized it with his election, smooth transitions from president to president had added to it
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Legitimacy
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strong, autocratic leaders of Russia, large legitimacy
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Tsars
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communist rule that provided the legitimacy base for the party
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Marxism-Leninism
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rule by a few instead of the many, "vanguard" rulers, proposed by Lenin
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Democratic Centralism
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more of a totalitarian ruler, more complete, invasive form of strong-man rule than the tsars ever were
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Stalinism
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provided for a strong president, although the power was checked by popular election and lower house of legislature, required referendum of people to endorse it
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Constitution of 1993
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lower house of the legislature, had actually existed during 19th century
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Duma
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absolute power defended with brutality and force, based on geography because Huns, Vikings, Mongols would conquer them, Russians needed firm, unchallenged leaders
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Absolute, Centralized Rule
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numerous invasions meant different cultures, rapidly expanding borders stretched the empire to include more and more people, constant state of change with ethnicity, borders impossible to draw
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Extensive Cultural Heterogeneity
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reflects the diversity, with countless "republics" and "autonomous regions" based on ethnicity
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Russian Federation
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"lover of Slaves", led to a pride in Slavic customs, language, religion, history, led Russia to resist outside influence
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Slavophile
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wanted to "modernize" Russia with a stronger army, navy, roads, communication, "Window on the West", intrigued by the west, learned shipbuilding, brought engineers, carpenters, etc.
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Peter the Great
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St. Petersburg, a city built on newly conquered lands near Baltic Sea
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Window on the West
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followed Peter the Great and his efforts, led to a major empire, set in place a conflict, managed to gain access to Black Sea, was interested in Enlightenment development
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Catherine the Great
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challenged the traditional views of Russians
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George Kennan
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seized power and renamed the country Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
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Bolsheviks
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USSR
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Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
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communist leaders under Lenin replaced the tsars, ruled according to socialist principles, leaning toward absolute, centralized rule, old social classes swept away, tried to blend westernization with Slavophile
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Revolutions
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Russia is largest country in world, many different climates and ethnicities, borders touch many nations, coldest on earth, desire to conquer countries that have blocked access to sea, oil, gas, timber
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Geographic Setting
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Russians traded with Constantinople, adopting their religion, Russia did not share values of European Renaissance, Reformation, Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment, came to value strong state
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Eastern Orthodoxy
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The idea that the rights of the nation are supreme over the rights of the individuals who make up the nation, no separation of church and state
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Statism
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spheres of privacy free from control of state, western idea
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Civil Society
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Communists instilled appreciation for equality, most resent differences in wealth, different from equality of opportunity, not conducive to capitalism
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Equality of Result
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the doctrine of the equality of mankind and the desirability of political and economic and social equality
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Egalitarianism
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Russian citizens are hostile to leadership, citizens have little faith in their political system, Putin has highest approval ratings, police have little in non-governmental agents
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Skepticism About Power
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new emphasis on freedom of speech and press, instituted by Gorbachev, received complaints from everyone
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Glasnost
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people characterize based on nationalities, discriminate based on stereotypes, admire Baltic people, disdain for Muslim-Turkic, passed laws discouraging people from settling in regions, anti-Semitism
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Importance of Nationality
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has had trouble with gradual and ordered change, tendency to descend into chaos or revolution, tsars understood dangers of chaos in Russia, resorted to force, had to keep out Renaissance ideas, gradual attempts at industrialization ended in assassination, Five-ear Plans were successful
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Troubles with Gradual Change
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freed Russian serfs and experimented with local assemblies, assassinated in 1881, seriously sponsored reform
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Alexander II
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14th century to 20th century rule, control was passed through the Romanov family, transitions were accompanied by brutality
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Autocratic Rule by Tsars
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20th century, V.I. Lenin seized control after Nicholas II, regime toppled in 1991
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Communist Party Rule
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Yeltsin put in western-style reforms in place, procedural democracy, free market in 1991
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Change to Democracy
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first tsars were princes of Moscow, cooperated with Mongol rulers, were rewarded with power, when Mongols weakened, they declared themselves "tsars", autocratic and controlled land tightly, isolated as result, long distances separated it
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Tsarist rule
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headed by the tsars
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Russian Orthodox Church
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one who rules absolutely, with clear goals for the country in mind, Catherine and Peter the Great
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Enlightened Despot
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Russia brought into contact with West when Napoleon invaded, Alexander I resisted, Western thought influenced Russian intellectuals, no rooms for politics under tsars, tsars sent secret police to investigate and exile the critics
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19th Century Tsars
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resulted from intellectuals' frustration with absolute rule; ruthlessly crushed by many of Nicholas I
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Decembrist Revolt of 1825
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Russia defeated in this war, convinced many of tsar's critics that Russian ways were backwards and in need of reform
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Crimean War
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assemblies, local ones set up by Alexander II
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Zemstvas
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an educated and intellectual elite
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Intelligentsia
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son of Alexander II, undid many reforms of his father, intensified efforts of secret police
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Alexander III
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Russia's ineffectiveness in fighting Russo-Japanese War, World War I, Nicolas was in wrong place at wrong time, weak ruler with no control over his armies
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Cause of Revolution of 1917
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ruler of Russia who was deposed during the Revolution, weak ruler who had no control over his armies
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Nicholas II
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predicted socialist revolutions would take place first in nations like Germany, France and England
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Marxism
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VI Lenin's pamphlet, argued for democratic centralism, vanguard leadership that would lead the revolution, believed revolution could occur because of terrible conditions
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What Is To Be Done?
question
led by Russian military leaders and funded by Allied Powers
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White Army
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army led by Lenin, winning side
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Red Army
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instituted by Lenin, allowed a great deal of private ownership to exist under a centralized leadership, brought prosperity to farmers, non industrialization
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New Economic Policy
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drastically changed Lenin's democratic centralism, Communist Party at center of control, no other political parties, 7% were members, ran all governments
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Joseph Stalin
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the process of party members selecting promising recruits from lower levels
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Nomenklatura
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most important top government officials, a group of 300 party leaders that met twice a year
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Central Committee
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above the Central Committee, heart and soul of Communist party, twelve men who ran the country, decisions carried out by government agencies and department
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Politburo
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head of the Politburo, assumed full power as dictator of county
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General Secretary
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state run farms, more effectively, did away with private land ownership, farms were intended to feed workers in the cities who contributed to industrilaization
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Collectivization
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peasants who resisted that owned large farms, were forced to move to cities or labor camps
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Kulaks
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Stalin's economic plans, set ambitious goals for production of oil, steel, electricity
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Five Year Plan
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the Central State Planning Commission, became nerve center for the economy, determined production and distribution of all goods in the Soviet Union
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Gosplan
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the two-pronged program of collectivization and industrialization carried out be central planning and executed with force and brutality
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Stalinism
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primary goal was internal development, advocated "socialism in one country", tried to ignore fascist threats, signed non-aggression pact with Germany in 1939, attacked by Germany following year, joined sides with allies, tensions at conferences escalated to Cold War
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Stalin's Foreign Policy
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execution of millions of citizens, up to one million party members, became obsessed with disloyalty in party ranks, ordered execution of his own generals, held total power, many speculated he had gone made by the end
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Purges
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chose as party secretary and premier, gave famous secret speech, DeStalinization, criticized for his reforms and diplomatic failure in Cuban Missile Crisis
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Nikita Khrushchev
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Khrushchev revealed existence of a letter written by Lenin before he died, critical of Stalin, used it to denounce his practices
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Secret Speech
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a process that led to reforms such as loosening government censorship of press, decentralization of economic decision-making, restructuring of collective farms
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DeStalinization
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relaxation of tensions between US and Soviet Union
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Peaceful Coexistence
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replaced Khrushchev, much more conservative, ended reforms and tried to cope with increased economic power
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Leonid Brezhnev
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replaced Brezhnev, unlike any Soviet leader before, acted "western', open to many reforms, inherited many problems, three-pronged program (Glasnost, Democratization, Perestroika)
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Mikhail Gorbachev
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"openness", allowed more discussion of political, social, and economic issues as well as criticism of government, caused many problems for Gorbachev, people vented hostility toward government, caused open revolt
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Glasnost
question
believed he could keep Old Soviet structure with more democracy, new Congress of People's deputies, new position of President
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Democratization
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economic reform, most radical, least successful, tried to keep old structure and modernize it, transferred economic power to private hands, authorization of privately owned companies, penalties for under-performing factories, etc.
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Perestroika
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1991 "conservatives" from within Politburo led coup d'etat that tried to remove Gorbachev, failed when popular protests broke out, soldiers defected, protesters led by Boris Yeltsin, December 1991 11 republics had declared independence, Gorbachev forced to announce end of Union
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Failed Coup
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created a three-branch government, with a president, prime minister, lower legislative house called the Duma, and a Constitutional Court
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Constitution of 1993
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many are affected by contradictory influences from their political culture, say they support democratic government although they do not believe one exists, like the idea of strong state, etc.
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Citizens
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nationality, social class, rural/urban divisions
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Cleavages
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80% are Russian, others include Tatars, Ukrainians, Armenians, Chuvashes, etc., determine organization of country into "federation", "autonomous regions", many would like their independence, nationalists have take to kidnappings, suicide bombings, xenophobic attacks in Russia, fatal school of soccer fan, etc., "Russians for Russians"
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Nationality
question
a primarily Muslim region that has fought for years for its freedom, Russia has had considerable difficulty keeping Chechnya a part of Russia, involved in terrorist acts, referendum to gain legitimacy for Russian government in Chechnya
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Chechnya
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former rebel, became president of Chechnya in 2007, fighting has not stopped, endorsed by Putin
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Ramzan Kadyrov
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Tsarist Russia was overwhelmingly Russian Orthodox, tsar served as spiritual head of state, Soviet Union prohibited religious practices of all kinds, citizens lost their religious affiliations, LARGELY NON-RELIGIOUS, Moscow contains ultimately authority in church matters
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Religion
question
had split after Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, vowing never to return as long as the "godless regime" was in power, reunited with Russian Orthodox Church
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Russian Church Abroad
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Moscow has large population who are laborers, Caucasus seen as a hot spot of trouble, problems with Chechnya made it had for Putin to cultivate relationship, Bashkortostan and Tatarstan had calmer relationships
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Muslim Concentration
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president of Tatarstan, accompanied Putin around Middle East in restructuring Russia's image of Muslim
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Mintimer Shaimiev
question
Soviet attempts to destroy class differences were successful, noble/peasant difference no longer exists, but Party and non-Party members made new cleavage, economic favors granted to those in power, however egalitarian views and nomenklatura didn't take background into account
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Social Class
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people who have recently amassed fortunes from new business opportunities, many survived and new opportunities are emerging, Putin era took aim at any who didn't pay taxes
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New Entrepreneur Class
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industrialization has led to increasing urban population, divide between them is wide, city dwellers are more educated, in touch with west, etc.
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Rural/Urban Cleavages
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predicted the demise of Capitalist West, belief fed into Russian nationalism and supported the notion that the Russian government and way of life would prevail
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Marxism
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information about people's views is scarce, people are alienated from political system, people support democratic ideals, including free elections and civil liberties, do not believe government can create these things,
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Mistrust of Government
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Russians expect the state to take an active role in their lives, citizens function more as subjects than participants, expect great deal from government
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Statism
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nearly all parties support market transition, privatization and limited government regulation is rapid market reform, "shock therapy"
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Economic Beliefs
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Slavophile vs. Westernizer, some parties emphasis nationalism and defense of Russian interests, etc.
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Westernization
question
Russians did vote in 20th century, but elections were not competitive until Gorbachev, still noncompetitive because it was choice between official candidate and alternate
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Voting
question
many criticized government's economic policies that led to sinking, Vladivostok, 1000 protesters marched through the streets, police riots, etc.
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Political Protest
question
since 1991 turnout has been highest than in the United States, presidential elections has been higher than Duma elections, etc.
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Voter Turnout
question
private organizations and associations outside of politics, leas to low political participation, Russians don't attend church, belong to clubs, etc., 1% belong to political party, however appears to be growing, emerged as result of glasnost on issues like environment, ethnicity, gender, human rights, etc.
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Civil Society
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state-sponsored organizations in this arrangement with the government because Soviet authorities argued that only the party could and should represent the people's interest
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State Corporatism
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Russia's largest youth movement, organized mass marches in support of Putin, laid siege to Estonian embassy
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Nashi
question
Nashi, Youth Guard, Locals, all are in effort to build a following of loyal, patriotic young people, defuse resistance
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Youth Groups
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youth wing of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
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Komsomol
question
89 regions, each bound by treaty to the Federation, most regions are called "Republics", many ruled themselves independently, authoritarian,
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Federal Government Structure
question
some regions are much stronger than others
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Asymmetric Federalism
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seven new federal districts encompassing all of Russia, each headed by a presidential appointee
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Super-Districts
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a law allowing the president to remove from office a governor who refuses to subject local law to national constitution
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Removal of Governors
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measure ending direct election of regional governors, president would elect governors and local legislatures would confirm
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Appointment of Governors
question
upper legislative house, change prohibited governors and Duma heads from serving themselves
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Federation Council
question
Putin initiated change to pure proportional representation electoral system
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Elimination of Single-Member District Seats
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very weak, situation which undermines recent attempts to establish a democracy, political parties were unstable, no solid footing for interest groups
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Linkage Institutions
question
Russia has had to put them together overnight, small factional ones, 43 on ballot in 1995, revolved around specific leaders, others reflected a particular group, 26 in 1999, but mostly new ones, no time to develop party loyalties, personalistic rule, new rules shrank number
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Parties
question
proportional representation requires all parties to win at least 7% of national vote to win any seats
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Change in Voting Rules
question
formed in April 2001 between Fatherland All-Russia Party and Unity Party, intended to support Putin in presidential election, won 221 seats in 2004, gained 64$ of vote in 2007, hard to define ideologically, PRO-PUTIN
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United Russia
question
second strongest party, even though never won a presidential election, far less reformist than other parties, opposed many reforms, continues to support stability of old regime, centralized planning and nationalism
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Communist Party of Russian Federation
question
CPRF leader, came in second in 1996 and 2000 presidential elections
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Gennady Zyuganov
question
most controversial party, headed by Vladimir Zhirinovsky, made headlines for extreme nationalist positions, attacks reformists, implied he would use nuclear weapons on Japan, anti-Semitic remarks, sexist comments, etc.
answer
Liberal Democrats
question
formed in 2006, formed from many organizations, gained 38 seats in Duma
answer
A Just Russia
question
managed to win 8% of vote in regional elections in 2011, came in third, Kremlin product, "statists" and "patriots" aiming to build "great and prosperous" Russia, foil the Communist Party and Just Russia
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Patriots of Russia
question
parties strongly sponsored by economic and political power-holders, less ideological
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Parties of Power
question
president could call for one by popular vote on important issues, Yeltsin called for one on his job performance, later held in favor of new Constitution, vote to approve Chechnyan Constitution
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Referendum
question
five different times, 450 seats, all seats now assigned by proportional representation, eliminated "against all" option as well, must get at least 7% of national vote to gain any seats
answer
Duma Elections
question
two-round model that Duma has, some questioned honesty of elections, media clearly favored both candidates who won, law restricted right of small parties to run presidential candidates
answer
Presidential Elections
question
only allowed under state corporatism in Soviet Union , controlled by government, state-owned industries were bought by insiders after collapse of Soviet Union, collection of oligarchs were major interest group
answer
Interest Groups
question
group of wealth insiders who bought state-owned industries after collapse of Soviet Union, monopolized Yeltsin and took control of largest industries, Putin showed resistance, clashed with entrepreneurs, economic climate has weakened the oligarchs
answer
Oligarchy
question
best known oligarch, he and six others control half of Russia's GNP, used media to ensure Yeltsin's reelection
answer
Boris Berezovsky
question
richest man in Russia, CEO of Yukos Oil Company, arrested as signal from Putin the government was consolidating power
answer
Mikhail Khodorvsky
question
state determines which groups have input into policy-making, vast state-owned holding companies in automobile and aircraft industries, etc., government has forced companies who are too independent of government to sell
answer
State Corporatism
question
either government-controlled companies or companies run by men seen as loyal to Mr. Putin
answer
Insider Privatization
question
controls more than under-world crime, control local businesses, natural resources, banks, thrive on protection money, laundering, deals with Russian governments, murder bankers, journalists, etc.
answer
Russian Mafia
question
Pravda only printed what government officials wanted it to, continued as independent newspaper later on, little to fear from official censorship, biggest stories focus on celebrities, etc., reports for serious journalists are tough, criticizing the government, clearly doesn't have freedom of the press, DON'T CRITICIZE THE GOVERNMENT
answer
Russian Media
question
official newspaper of the Soviet Union, reinvented itself as a tabloid, little to fear from official censorship because of investigative journalism, etc.
answer
Pravda
question
only independent television network, Kremlin took it over, tried to play honest reporting, was ousted by the government, correspondent died
answer
NTV
question
shows freedom of press, most networks didn't even cover it, NTV didn't show up until late, etc.
answer
Beslan School Seizure
question
hybrid of presidential and parliamentary systems, meant to allow for a strong presidency, but still allow some democratic checks on executive power, branches have stabilized but it's too soon to tell whether it will be successful
answer
Semi-Presidential System
question
separates the head of state and head of government
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Executive Branch
question
the president, has been far from ceremonial, came to dominate the prime minister under Putin, elected for four-year (six year in 2012), limit of two terms, anyone who gets a million signatures can run
answer
Head of State
question
prime minister, dominated by president
answer
Head of Government
question
Duma must approve it, but if they reject it three times, president may dissolve them, Putin was prime minister when he ran for president, appointed Kasyanov
answer
Appoint Prime Minister and Cabinet
question
have force of law, cabinet has a great deal of concentrated, centralized power, Duma has no power to censure cabinet, created United Aircraft Corporation
answer
Issue Decrees
question
the president can get rid of the Parliament, can order the army to fire on the building until the members give up,
answer
Dissolve the Duma
question
takes over in case of presidential death or resignation, not leader of majority party, instead have much expertise as result of work in bureaucracy
answer
Prime Minister
question
Russian legislature has proved to be weak check on executive, Duma and Federation Council
answer
Bicameral Legislature
question
lower house with 450 deputies, passes bills, approves budget, confirms president's appointments, very limited powers, impeachment process is cumbersome
answer
Duma
question
consists of two members from each of 89 federal administrative units, one representative is selected by the governor of each region and another by regional legislature, represents regions, not populations, has main power of delaying legislation, can change boundaries among republics, ratify use of armed force, appoint new judges
answer
Federation Council
question
nineteen members, appointed by president, confirmed by Federation Council, moved to St. Petersburg away from political influence, POWER TO CHALLENGE CONSTITUTIONALITY, suffers from lack of legal training
answer
Constitutional Court
question
created to serve as final court of appeals in criminal and civil cases, does not have power to challenge constitutionality of laws and political actions
answer
Supreme Court
question
attempted to revive period of law reform, including jury trial, procedural code for criminal and civil rights, great deal of money on reform, Putin's impact on courts was unacceptable to Clinton
answer
Putin's Law Reforms
question
State Security Committee
answer
KGB
question
state and society have been pushed away from law by corruption, allowing police to continue to operate autonomously, security police are generally least corrupt, puts drag on economic development because so much money is siphoned off for bribes
answer
Role of Corruption
question
Soviet government paid for this ahead of everything, 4 million men, did not take lead in politics, shows no sign of becoming a political force, suffered military humiliation, soldiers go unpaid and supply own food
answer
Military
question
prominent general, gained political following before election of 1996, military coup unlikely, Russian Air Force would assert old vigor by long-range patrols by nuclear-capable bombers again, move was seen by many as rise in strength by many in military again, military spending has increased
answer
Alexander Lebed
question
perestroika reforms never fully implemented, dissent within Politburo led to coup, "shock therapy" created chaotic conditions resulted in oligarchs running country, stock market toppled, government defaulted on loans, unemployment soared, ruple collapsed, new industries improved, standard of living rose, stimulus plan had very little effect, economy is run by oil and gas reserves, need to diversify
answer
The Economy
question
dominance of the world was broken, time of chaos and humiliation, relied on loans of US to gain economic footing
answer
Foreign Policy
question
unites the fifteen former republics of the Soviet Union, has little power over its members, Russia, trade agreements bind them, nationality issue divide them, Putin's involvement in elections in Ukraine was controversial, controversy in Estonia
answer
Confederation of Independent States
question
US emerged as only superpower, Bush and Clinton believed in working relationship with Russia, G-8 summits, aid packages for Russia, Russia is entering WTO, clout comes from oil and gas industries, terrorist attacks with 9/11 made tense the relationships between the nations
answer
Relations with West
question
a powerful body responsible for regulating international trade, settling trade disputes, and designing trade policy through meetings
answer
World Trade Organization
question
Belsan school siege, suicide bombing in Moscow, Putin argued tighter grip
answer
Terrorism
question
Russia has suffered dramatic drop in overall population, predicts 18% drop by 2050, low birth rate and poor health habits, alcohol-related death, life expectancy is low, government is encouraging Russians to return home, repatriation program, etc.
answer
Population Issues
question
Putin's party controls huge part of the Duma, government has controlled power of oligarchs, controls major television stations, Russian gas giant Gazprom, not clear whether it marks end of democracy or reaction to terrorism
answer
Re-Centralization of Power
question
a public life that is defined by government, private life in which people are free to make their own individual choices, do not share the idea of life, liberty, and property, became a superpower through strong central government
answer
Development of Civil Society
Commerce And Industry
Political Party System
chapter 11-16 test bank questions – Flashcards 148 terms

Karlie Mack
148 terms
Preview
chapter 11-16 test bank questions – Flashcards
question
public interest and involvement in politics grew in the U.S. after 1820 because of a growing
answer
conviction that government should promote the economic well-being of society
question
in the presidential election of 1824
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the house of representatives chose the president, because no candidate received a majority of the popular vote
question
as president john quincy adams
answer
proposed a broad program for manufacturing, agriculture, and the arts
question
which of the following statements concerning equality in jacksonian america is NOT true
answer
because political leaders had to appeal to an expended electorate, campaigns became less boisterous and more focused on specific policy issues
question
the process, championed by John Ross, whereby the Cherokees created a constitution, adopted white ways, and began selling their surplus crops was known as
answer
accommodation
question
three major issues dominated Jackson's administration, all the result of the nation's rapid geographic and economic expansion. which of the following is NOT one of these three issues
answer
controls on both slave and free black communities
question
jackson's popularity was derived not only from defeating the british but also from
answer
his opening extensive tracts of indian lands to white settlement
question
which of the following statements best describes the attitude of Jacksonian Democrats toward slavery and blacks
answer
they accepted the institution of slavery in the south and opposed rights for free blacks in the north
question
which of the following leaders advocated the idea of state nullification in order to oppose the tariff
answer
john c. calhoun
question
Daniel Webster refuted Calhoun's theory of american government by arguing that
answer
the constitution was created by "the people" and not as a compact among the separate states
question
which of the following statements about the nullification crisis of 1832 is FALSE
answer
jackson eventually backed down from the controversy and gave in completely to south Carolina's demands
question
which of the following statements concerning the bank of the united states is true
answer
andrew jackson hated it because he thought it was an agent of special privilege and he vetoed the bill to recharter it
question
within only two months of taking office, president martin van burn ran into trouble because of
answer
a business panic that became a lingering depression
question
which of the following groups played a rather surprising role in the whig campaign in 1840
answer
women
question
in the Jacksonian party system
answer
the whigs supported a very active role for government; the democrats generally favored a limited government
question
what distinguished the new political system of the 1820s from that of the early american republic
answer
mass electioneering
question
why did most states eliminate property qualifications for voters, and even for candidates, in the 1820s and the 1830s
answer
they felt the pressure of citizens championing the will of the people
question
which of the following best describes the political vision of john quincy adams
answer
viewing the government as the promoter of economy and culture
question
which of the following is a feature of american politics as it has been practiced since the days of andrew jackson
answer
more emphasis on a candidate's personality than on issues
question
which of the following was an example of a way in which the cherokee had embraced southern white culture
answer
they, too, forbade the intermarriage of blacks with those of their race
question
how many free blacks lived in the united states in 1840
answer
171,000
question
what accounted for the economic troubles of south carolina in the 1820s?
answer
the panic of 1819 and soil exhaustion
question
what did critics think of the role of the second bank of the united states in the panic of 1819
answer
they considered it the cause of the crisis
question
in 1829, there were 329 banks in the united states, how many were there in 1837, the year after the end of the second bank of the united states
answer
almost 800
question
in 1849, whigs had the strongest support
answer
in cities
question
why did evangelicals in america abandon their old belief that god had already determined who was damned and who was saved
answer
the notion clashed with the revolutionary faith in human agency and reason
question
evangelical black churches grew in the north even as they were being suppressed in the south after 1820. the most important of the new black independent churches was the
answer
african methodist episcopal church
question
which of the following is NOT an accurate statement concerning the significance of the second great awakening
answer
it reinforced the sense of pessimism and guilt that was present in america at the time
question
the ideal of domesticity
answer
held that women's sphere was the home and family
question
who supported women's education and argued that women exercised power as moral guardians of the nations future
answer
catharine beecher
question
with respect to the middle-class family after 1820, all of the following explain the decline in family size in general and in the birth rate in particular EXCEPT
answer
a view of family more geared to functional usefulness than affection
question
romanticism
answer
considered emotion as the source of truth
question
transcendentalism
answer
sought to rise above reason through individualist spiritual communion with nature
question
robert owen recruited followers for his program to reform society by teaching that
answer
shared property and equality of work division would foster tolerant people
question
which of the following is NOT an accurate statement about Mormonism
answer
Mormons believed in a strict seperation of church and state
question
what was the essential conviction of William Lloyd Garrison about slavery
answer
it was a sin
question
why was the loose network of antislavery sympathizers who conveyed runaway slaves north to freedom known as the underground railroad
answer
runaway slaves were directed by conductors from one "station" to the next
question
seneca falls, new york, was the site of
answer
the first major women's rights convention
question
the gag rule of 1836
answer
tabled any congressional discussion of slavery
question
what was the platform of the liberty party in 1840
answer
abolition
question
before 1800, most american evangelicals embraced the doctrines of
answer
calvinism
question
the first african american evangelical church, the african methodist episcopal church, emerged in 1816 in
answer
philadelphia
question
how did americans think about liquor during much of the eighteenth century
answer
it was part of their diet
question
in 1815, there were 150,000 catholics in the united states. how many were there in 1830
answer
300,000
question
why did henry David Thoreau live alone in a cabin on the edge of walden pond in concord, massachusetts, for sixteen months in 1845
answer
he wanted to demonstrate the advantages of self-reliance
question
where did the mormon faith first emerge in 1827
answer
palmyra, new york
question
antislavery activist and quaker benjamin lundy advocated all of the following except
answer
racial equality
question
in which town did a mob seize William Lloyd Garrison in 1835 to parade him around with a rope tied around his body?
answer
Boston
question
why did the national parties not pay much attention to the women's suffrage movement
answer
most advocates of suffrage could not vote for either party anyway
question
which of the following did NOT oppose Garrisonian abolitionism
answer
women, whom Garrison alienated when he refused to link the antislavery cause to women's rights
question
where was the black belt region described in the text located
answer
in central alabama, in the heart of deep south, where the rich soil was ideal for cotton
question
manufacturing lagged in the south because
answer
high profits from agriculture discouraged other possible investments
question
which statement best summarizes the effects of slavery on the southern economy
answer
it retarded southern development and led to economic dependency on the north
question
which of the following was not true about slavery as a labor system
answer
as slavery spread into the deep south, wealth and power became more equally shared among the various classes of white southerns
question
the slave population concentrated in all of the following places EXCEPT
answer
the upper south
question
the tidewater planter ______, while the planter of the deep south ______.
answer
aspired to the ideal of the english country gentleman; was an entrepreneur bound on making a fortune
question
Yeoman farmers in the south
answer
suffered from isolation, a limited market, and chronic money shortage
question
what group was vehemently opposed to ending slavery even though they sometimes traded with slaves and keenly resented planters
answer
poor whites
question
in terms of sheer number, which of the following groups made up the backbone of southern society
answer
yeoman farmers who owned no slaves
question
the gang and task systems
answer
were the two main ways of organizing slave labor
question
nat turner
answer
led a slave revolt despite enjoying relatively humane treatment by his master
question
the slave family
answer
usually consisted of the nuclear unit (father, mother, and their children), but often was part of larger kinship networks
question
in the 1830s, reacting to Nat Turner's rebellion and the growing abolitionist movement, southern slaveholders developed the argument that slavery was a positive good. which of the following assertions was NOT part of their proslavery argument
answer
slavery's opponents could build no persuasive argument against it
question
after 1830, southerns defended slavery more aggressively for all of the following reasons EXCEPT
answer
a perceived decline in souther influence in national politics
question
the Virginia debate of 1832
answer
was the last significant attempt by white southerns to take action against slavery
question
which of the following poised the biggest danger to cotton crops in the antebellum south
answer
army worms
question
why did slaveholders in the upper south sell their slaves during the antebellum years
answer
their new crops of wheat and corn required less labor and left slaves idle
question
which of the following represented the largest capital investment in the antebellum south
answer
slaves
question
texan cotton planters in the antebellum south showed all the characteristics of
answer
capitalist businessmen
question
which of the following did not limit southern yeoman famers' economic prosperity
answer
a lack of interest in field work
question
which of the following mattered most in the daily lives of slaves
answer
the deprivation of freedom
question
who typically treated sick slaves on plantations of the antebellum south
answer
the master
question
among slaves in the antebellum south, the traditional nuclear family of father, mother, and children was
answer
the rule
question
which of the following statements best assesses the significance of free black slave owners in the american south before the civil war
answer
they commonly bought their family members when those family members could not be legally freed
question
which of the following nations abolished involuntary servitude last
answer
the united states
question
three "frontiers" transformed plains indian culture long before white settlers pushed their settlement frontier west of the mississippi river. which of the following did NOT transform plains indian culture during this period
answer
liquor
question
which of the following ideas was manifest destiny NOT based on
answer
conquest of new territory would prove american military supperiority
question
which of the following did NOT contribute to the growing discontent and eventual revolt of americans in Texas
answer
the government's refusal to provide land for settlers
question
the overland trail migration was primarily a(n)
answer
young family enterprise
question
plains indians responded to the increasing numbers of emigrants on the overland trail by
answer
demanding compensation from both the government and the emigrants
question
texas was finally annexed by
answer
A joint resolution of congress in early 1845
question
the U.S.-Mexican War began when
answer
American and Mexican forces clashed over disputed border territory in southen Texas
question
A group of American settlers near sacramento launched a revolt against mexico; and in june 1846 they proclaimed california an independent republic. This action was the
answer
"bear flag revolt"
question
why did many of the immigrant chinese work in small businesses or the fishing industry instead of working as miners
answer
they were not harassed as much as in the gold fields
question
the settlements of the mormons in utah
answer
were established as family-centered communities dominated by church leaders
question
the doctrine of popular sovereignty was most closely associated with
answer
stephen a douglas
question
in the 1848 election campaign, which party set forth a clear position on the slavery issue
answer
free soil party
question
manifest destiny was a popular national creed, but there was a long-term cost. the sectional crisis of the 1850s was precipitated not only by the rising abolitionist movement in the north, but also by a question raised by expansion to the west
answer
what will be the status of slavery in the new territories
question
the final compromise of 1850, originally introduced by Henry Clay as a single "omnibus Bill," passed as five separate pieces of legislation. which of the following was NOT included
answer
slavery was abolished in the district of colombia
question
a famous novel by the daughter of Lyman Beecher rallied northern hostility toward one particular component of the compromise of 1850, the
answer
fugitive slave law, which allowed southerns to more easily reclaim their runaway slaves
question
who coined the term "manifest destiny"
answer
democratic editor john L. sullivan
question
compared to slaves in the american south, native american peons on california's rancheros
answer
died at twice the rate
question
which of the following was not a driving motication for settlers heading west in after the mid-1830s?
answer
reports of submissive native americans willing to work hard for no pay
question
how did european migrants on the overland trail to oregon change the lives of native americans
answer
they scared off game and reduced buffalo herds
question
in the presidential elections of 1844, James K. Polk defeated his whig rival Henry Clay
answer
by the narrowest of margins
question
what proved more profitable in California than venturing out for gold after 1846
answer
mining the miners
question
why did chinese open up laundries in San Francisco in the 1850s
answer
It required little capital and aroused no white opposition
question
which of the following best assesses the presidential campaign of Zachary Taylor
answer
he remained silent through the campaign
question
how long did congress debate the compromise of 1850
answer
for six months
question
who invented a sharp-cutting steel plow that could slice through the thick tangle of prairie grass roots without the soil sticking to the blade
answer
john deer
question
which of the following does NOT characterize the american economy in the 1840s and 1850s
answer
agriculture remained largely unaffected by technology, and thus diminished in importance as a component of the market economy
question
which is a correct statement regarding mid-century immigrants
answer
germans, irish, and scandinavians came seeking improved economic opportunity
question
what was the Galdsden purchase
answer
the acquisition of a strip of mexican land as a railroad route
question
according to the kansas-Nebraska act, what would be the status of slavery in those western territories
answer
the people would decide
question
why was the kansas-nebraska act so controversial
answer
because it overturned a policy on slavery already in place, northerners felt betrayed
question
the "know-nothing" or nativist movement (later the american party), which prospered especially in the northeastern states, was characterized by its
answer
anti-catholic, anti-immigrant position
question
the republican party
answer
prospered because of northern outrage over "bleeding sumner" and "bleeding kansas"
question
to what does "bleeding sumner" refer
answer
violence on the floor of the U.S. senate
question
the dred scott decision
answer
asserted that congress could not ban slavery from any territory
question
uncle tom's cabin, a novel that was quickly adapted into a play, had a significant impact on northern opinion because it
answer
conveyed a moral condemnation of slavery
question
in his freeport doctrine, douglas defended popular sovereignty despite the dred scott ruling by arguing that
answer
if the people of a territory refused to pass a slave code, slavery would never be established there
question
john brown's raid on harpers ferry was significant for all of the following reasons EXCEPT
answer
that it provoked bloody retaliation against antislavery voters in kansas
question
the first shots of the civil war were fired when
answer
lincoln decided to hold a fort on southern soil
question
in what order did the following states secede from the union
answer
south carolina; alabama; virginia
question
what primary thing had changed in the american economy by the 1850s
answer
cotton no longer served as the driving force for growth
question
what allowed isaac finger to mass-produce sewing machines in 1851
answer
the use of interchangeable parts
question
the "young america" movement in the democratic party tried to
answer
spread democracy around the globe
question
the election victories of the know-nothig party in 1854 spelled doom for
answer
the whigs
question
which of the following best characterizes president james buchanan (1857-1861)
answer
he was one of the most experience men ever elected president
question
how did the panic of 1857 further cement southerners' confidence in the viability of a confederacy
answer
the downturn did not affect the south, keeping southerners prosperous
question
why did southerns feel increasingly beleaguered by the end of the 1850s
answer
high slave prices locked more and more whites out of the masters ranks
question
who did southern democrats nominate as a presidential candidate for the 1860 election
answer
john c. Breckinridge
question
what forced lincoln to act immediately on souther secession
answer
fort sumnter's need for supplies
question
ralph waldo emerson called john brown
answer
A saint
question
at the beginning of the civil war, which one of the following factors favored the south?
answer
the fact that the fighting would be on southern soil
question
what was jefferson davis's central problem in organizing the south for war
answer
in a society that prized states' rights, davis had to centralize authority
question
what was the first union success of the war
answer
holding the border states in the union
question
dissidents in one southern state created which new border state
answer
west virginia
question
the first decisive union military victory of the war occured
answer
in the west, in the middle tennessee river valley under general grant
question
lincoln's emancipation proclamation declared slaves to be free
answer
in those areas of the south under confederate control
question
what is true about african americans during the civil war
answer
many slaves escaped the union lines, where they were put to work or even allowed to join the army
question
during the war, women of both the north and south did all of the following except
answer
run railroads
question
lincoln, later revered as the great emancipator, ironically infringed on the civil liberties of northerners during the civil war-specifically by
answer
suspending the writ of habeas corpus in specified areas in the north
question
which of the following is NOT an accurate statement about civil war soldiering
answer
the lower classes of society, rather than the typical farmer or shopkeeper, made up a disproportionate share of each army
question
the civil war marked a significant change in the history of human warfare, in all EXCEPT which of the following ways
answer
more soldiers died of battle wounds than camp diseases
question
the significance, militarily, of the battle of gettysburg was that
answer
lee could never again take the offensive as he liked to do
question
lincoln finally found "his general." who was he, and why
answer
general grant, who was willing to keep attacking with the tactics of total and relentless war
question
according to the text, what was the even that decided the "war in the balance" -- that is, the event that both ended any last hopes of the confederacy and assured the abolition of slavery
answer
the re-election of lincoln
question
which of the following is NOT a true statement about the impact of the war
answer
the richest section of the country (in terms of white per capita wealth) became even richer
question
which of the following did the confederacy have to accomplish in order to win the war
answer
prevent union armies from entering the confederacy
question
in order to secure the border state of maryland, lincoln suspended
answer
the writ of habeas corpus
question
why did ulysses s. grant think that rivers were important in the war
answer
rivers were avenues into the interior of the confederacy
question
which of the following was the most important method of financing the war for the confederacy
answer
printing paper money
question
which of the following was the most important means for financing the war in the union
answer
taxes
question
in the north, workers' real income during the civil war
answer
dropped by almost 30 percent
question
what was the largest historical significance of the service of women as nurses during the civil war
answer
it reduced hostility toward women in the field of medicine
question
how did the fear of death affect many soldiers in the confederate army
answer
they underwent religious revivals
question
how did the civil war change the national economy
answer
large military orders for manufacturers fostered truly national industries
Equal Pay For Equal Work
Government Regulation Of The Economy
Political Behavior
Political Party System
PolySci Test 2 – Flashcards 125 terms

Judith Simpson
125 terms
Preview
PolySci Test 2 – Flashcards
question
An organization that consists of individuals interested in controlling government by winning elections is referred to as a
answer
political party
question
In Texas, the two leading political parties are the
answer
Democratic and Republican
question
A general election is held in
answer
November of even-numbered years.
question
In Texas, a candidate may only win an office in a general election if he/she receives
answer
a majority of the vote
question
The hierarchical levels of American political parties is known as a
answer
level system
question
The American political party system consists of
answer
national, state, county, and precinct levels.
question
Primary elections in Texas are usually held
answer
in March of even-numbered years.
question
The lowest level of the temporary party organizations in Texas are the
answer
state conventions
question
Which of the following would be performed at a party's precinct convention?
answer
Nomination of delegates to the county convention
question
Precinct conventions in Texas are usually
answer
lightly or sparsely attended.
question
Resolutions adopted at the precinct convention will be submitted first to the
answer
county or district convention.
question
Highly populated areas of the state that hold district conventions include
answer
Bexar, Harris, and Dallas counties.
question
The main business of county and district conventions is to
answer
select delegates to the state convention.
question
According to the Texas Election Code, each political party in Texas must hold a ___________ in June of even-numbered years.
answer
Primary Election
question
Which of the following tasks is performed every two years at the state party convention?
answer
Adoption of a party platform
question
Which of the following happens at the party state convention during presidential election years only?
answer
Selection of members of the state executive committee
question
The number of electoral voters each state receives is equal to the
answer
number of seats each state has in Congress.
question
How many electoral voters will Texas have in the presidential election of 2016?
answer
38
question
Party precinct chairs are selected by
answer
precinct voters.
question
The party's county executive committee is
answer
responsible for organizing the state party convention.
question
As mandated by Texas state law, each party's state executive committee must
answer
be comprised equally of men and women.
question
In Texas, a state party's chair is selected by the
answer
state convention delegates.
question
Returns from the party primaries for statewide office are canvassed by the
answer
state party executive committee.
question
Which policy would a conservative most likely support?
answer
Reduction or elimination of the graduated income tax
question
Concerning the "left-right" political divide in Texas, which term would most likely describe a politician
answer
Conservative
question
Since the 1930s, the terms __________ have meant more to many Texas voters than the names of political parties.
answer
liberal and conservative
question
Which political label would best describe a politician that is in favor of government regulation of the economy, but limited government involvement on social issues?
answer
Liberal
question
Liberals would most likely support which of the following policies?
answer
Equal pay for equal work laws regarding women
question
Political alliances during the Republic of Texas were based on
answer
personalities
question
When Congress passed the Reconstruction Acts, former slave owners and supporters of the Confederacy were
answer
purged as officeholders and denied the vote.
question
The history of the Texas political party system has tended toward
answer
Texas being a one-party state.
question
One of the possible reasons why Anglo voters opposed Governor E.J. Davis was that he
answer
appointed African Americans to office throughout the state.
question
During the period of Reconstruction that followed the Civil War (1865-1873), the __________ Party controlled Texas politics
answer
Republican
question
After Reconstruction, which political party dominated in Texas for more than 100 years?
answer
Democratic
question
Which political party during the latter part of the nineteenth century focused on agrarian issues and posed a challenge to the Democratic party of Texas?
answer
Populist
question
At the turn of the twentieth century, the Populist Party in Texas declined, largely due to
answer
the Democratic Party adopting its issues.
question
Beginning in the late 1940s, a majority of conservative Democrats in Texas began to support the
answer
national Republican ticket.
question
Between 1900 and 1950, the main political conflict in Texas was between
answer
liberal and conservative Democrats.
question
Which Texas governor supported Dwight Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956?
answer
Alan Shivers
question
Who was the first Texas Republican elected in a statewide vote in the last half of the twentieth century?
answer
John Tower
question
Which governor, elected in 1978, was the first Republican to hold that office since Reconstruction?
answer
William Clements
question
Who was the first woman to represent Texas in the U.S. Senate?
answer
Kay Bailey Hutchison
question
Which Texas governor, elected in 1994, was successful as the Republican Party's candidate for President in 2000?
answer
George W. Bush
question
In __________, for the first time since the primary system was established in Texas, Republican primaries were conducted in all 254 Texas counties.
answer
1996
question
In which of the following decades did the Republican Party in Texas begin to win almost all of the statewide offices it challenged?
answer
1990s
question
In the Texas general election of 2000, which two parties had more candidates for statewide office than did the Democratic Party?
answer
Green and Libertarian
question
In the 2002 general election, Republicans
answer
won all state wide races
question
In the Texas general election of 2002, which trio was dubbed, "the dream team" because of their expected appeal to Latino, African American, and Anglo voters?
answer
Sanchez, Kirk, and Sharp
question
The first Texas candidate to receive more than 4 million votes was
answer
Kay Bailey Hutchison.
question
In the closest presidential election of modern times, Governor Bush defeated Democratic nominee Al Gore by __________in 2000.
answer
four electoral votes (271 to 267)
question
Changing demographic patterns in Harris and Dallas counties have
answer
shown an increase in Democrats due to increases in minority populations.
question
In 2008, one reason why Obama won in Harris, Travis, Bexar, and Dallas counties was because of
answer
solid support from Latino and African American voters.
question
In the 2010 Texas gubernatorial race, Kay Bailey Hutchison was defeated most likely due to her
answer
being a woman
question
During the last 30 years, competition between Texas's Democratic and Republican parties has
answer
brought more women, Latinos, and African Americans into the state's political system.
question
The trend of voters abandoning their traditional political party allegiance is referred to as
answer
dealignment
question
Which one of the following geographic areas is a Democratic stronghold in Texas?
answer
Suburban Dallas-Fort Worth area
question
Which geographic area of Texas is a Republican stronghold?
answer
Texas Panhandle and Texas South Plains
question
A political party that is not one of the two major parties is referred to as a
answer
third party
question
Which statement best describes the Libertarian Party?
answer
It supports limited government and maximum individual liberties.
question
In which of the following ways have third parties been least successful?
answer
Winning elections to national offices
question
Of the third-parties listed below, which probably has had the least influence on Texas politics?
answer
Green
question
Which statement best describes the Green Party?
answer
It advocates environmental protection and government reform policies.
question
Candidates who run for office with no party affiliation are referred to as
answer
independents
question
The term independent applies to those candidates for office who
answer
have no party affiliation
question
The essence of representative government is having
answer
entrusting the enactment of laws to elected legislators
question
Functions of the Texas legislature include all of the following, except
answer
appointing state judges
question
The number of senators in the Texas legislature is
answer
31
question
The only unicameral state legislature is that of
answer
Nebraska
question
The Texas House of Representatives consists of __________ members
answer
150
question
Legislative redistricting for both houses in Texas routinely occurs
answer
the first odd-numbered year in a decade
question
The terms of office for members of the Texas legislature are
answer
S4HR2 No lim
question
Which of the following is a true statement regarding senators in the Texas legislature?
answer
They all stand for election the year following redistricting
question
A vacancy in the Texas House or Senate arising during a term is filled by
answer
a special election
question
Regular sessions of the Texas legislature meet for
answer
140 days in odd numbered years
question
Which of the following is a false statement regarding special sessions of the Texas legislature?
answer
They are limited to three per year.
question
Which of the following is a false statement regarding members of the Texas legislature?
answer
Vacancies to legislative seats are filled by governor's appointment.
question
The Texas legislature differs most from the U.S. Congress in that
answer
it meets in regular session for a very limited time.
question
At a minimum, redistricting must occur every
answer
ten years
question
Redistricting may be politically difficult for a legislator primarily because it may
answer
take away previous voter support.
question
In Texas, the first legislative and congressional elections in districts determined by the 2010 census were conducted in
answer
November of 2012.
question
All Texas senate seats are up for election every ten years because
answer
Senate district lines are redrawn every 10 years.
question
The federal court case that applied the doctrine of "one-man, one-vote" to Texas was
answer
Kilgarlin v. Martin
question
The U.S. Supreme Court found in Reynolds v. Sims (1964) that
answer
legislative districts of bicameral state legislatures must have equal populations.
question
Which of the following statements best characterizes the Texas legislature?
answer
Anglo males are a majority of the membership in both houses of the legislature.
question
The first African American elected to the Texas Senate in modern times was
answer
Barbara Jordan.
question
After a state legislator serves__________ in office, he or she becomes eligible for a pension of __________.
answer
eight years; $23,000 per year
question
The concerns of the Mexican American Legislative Caucus in the 1990s produced
answer
larger appropriations for state universities in South Texas.
question
The liberal response to the Conservative Caucus is the
answer
Legislative Study Group.
question
Which of the following is the most important communication tool during a campaign?
answer
Television ads
question
According to studies, negative commercials
answer
draw voter preference away from the candidate being attacked.
question
Organizations created to collect and distribute contributions to political campaigns are referred to as
answer
political action committees.
question
Which of the following statements regarding the Campaign Reform Act of 2002 is false?
answer
It applies to candidates running for seats in the Texas legislature.
question
In which case did the Supreme Court overturn a ban on unlimited independent expenditures made by corporations, unions, and nonprofit organizations in federal elections?
answer
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010)
question
Which of the following does not describe Texas campaign finance regulations for state offices?
answer
There are no disclosure requirements by candidates.
question
As a percentage, Texas's Latino population is
answer
more than half of the state's total population.
question
The Latino community showed its political strength in May of 2010 by
answer
having 28,000 protesters in Dallas opposing the Arizona immigration law.
question
Which president appointed more Asians to federal judgeships?
answer
Obama
question
The average income for a white female is $48K and for a black female it is $31K; what is it for a Hispanic female?
answer
37K
question
Who first wrote about male privilege and later white privilege?
answer
Robert Jensen
question
Which case decided corporations were persons under the law?
answer
Santa Clara Co.
question
Joseph Claude Martin of Laredo political machine fame also went by what other name?
answer
Pepe Martin
question
Harry Truman came out of which political machine to become a Vice President of the US?
answer
Tom and George Pendergast
question
The Reform Movement to end political machines ushered in several new approaches to governing. Which of these was one?
answer
All of these
question
The documentary The Longoria Affair led to the rise of which civil rights organization?
answer
AGIF
question
D Heritage magazine on black politics in Dallas assigned for class has a time line for a concise history of such. When does it begin and end?
answer
1849-1995
question
Colonias the assigned booklet for class was published by whom?
answer
Dallas Federal Reserve Bank
question
Unemployment in the five Rio Grande Valley Colonias back in 1994 was higher than the state average of 7%. How much higher?
answer
from 20% to 60%
question
What percentage of Texas's African American citizens say that they are Democrats?
answer
80%
question
Which amendments to the U. S. Constitution were intended to prevent denial of the right to vote for African Americans?
answer
Fourteenth and Fifteenth
question
In the U.S. Supreme Court case of Guinn v. United States (1915), the court ruled that
answer
the grandfather clause was illegal.
question
Which U.S. amendment prevents states from requiring payment of a poll tax as a condition for voting?
answer
24th
question
A device used in Texas to prevent many lower-income persons and blacks from voting during much of the twentieth century was the
answer
Poll Tax
question
During the first half of the twentieth century, large numbers of African American voters were disqualified from voting as a result of
answer
All of the Above
question
Texas employed which of the following methods at one time or another during the twentieth century to deny the vote to large groups of individuals?
answer
Literacy tests, poll taxes, and white primaries
question
The case of Smith v. Allwright overturned the
answer
white-only primary elections in Texas
question
Manipulating legislative district lines to favor a political party or group is referred to as
answer
gerrymandering.
question
Of the various socioeconomic factors that influence voter turnout, which is considered the strongest?
answer
Education
question
A major requirement of the Voting Rights Act of 1975 is that ballots must be
answer
bilingual
question
An election in which party members choose a candidate to run for office in a general election is a
answer
primary election.
question
The size of the vote necessary to win a special election in Texas is a
answer
simple majority.
question
A vacancy in which of the following offices is not filled by a special election?
answer
Texas governor or lieutenant governor
question
Which of these Koch name(s) are the principal political actors in right-wing U.S. politics today?
answer
only two
question
"Koch Brothers Exposed" a recent documentary movie on the political funding by the Koch brothers asserts that they obtained 400 signature pledges from members of Congress to vote against climate change legislation if it did not include what?
answer
Tax cuts
question
"The Longoria Affair" featured several prominent men and a couple of lesser knowns and their efforts to bury Felix Longoria. Where did the burial eventually take place?
answer
Arlington VA
question
The next election in Arlington, Tx is set for May 9, 2015. When is the last day of Early Voting?
answer
May 5th
AP Government
City Council Members
Military History
Modern World History
Political Behavior
Political Party System
United States Government-Comprehensive
Modern World History- Chapter 15 – Flashcards 12 terms

Jill Lopez
12 terms
Preview
Modern World History- Chapter 15 – Flashcards
question
coalition government
answer
a government controlled by a temporary alliance of several political parties
question
Weimar Republic
answer
Germany's new democratic government set up in 1919.
question
Dawes Plan
answer
The plan to loan Germany $200 million from the United States to help strengthen the economy and stabilize German currency.
question
Lacarno Pact
answer
The pact between Germany (Gustav Streseman) and France(Aristide Briand). It basically says that Germany and France cannot attack each other, and Germany would respect the existing borders of France and Berlin.
question
Kellogg-Briand peace pact
answer
A pact arranged by Frank Kellog to "renounce war as an instrument of national policy". Almost every country in the world signed.
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October 29, 1929 (Black Tuesday)
answer
The day the stock market had a record of 16 million stocks sold. Also, the day the market crashed.
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The Great Depression
answer
The Great Depression was an economic depression notable for its duration and intensity that struck the world from 1929-1933. Recovery was a long and difficult process.
question
New Deal
answer
the historic period (1933-1940) in the U.S. during which President Franklin Roosevelt's economic policies were implemented
question
Fascism
answer
militant political movement that emphasizes loyalty to the state and obedience to its leader. It has no clearly defined theory or program.
question
Benito Mussolini
answer
Fascist dictator of Italy (1922-1943). He led Italy to conquer Ethiopia (1935), joined Germany in the Axis pact (1936), and allied Italy with Germany in World War II. He was overthrown in 1943 when the Allies invaded Italy.
question
Adolf Hitler
answer
German Nazi dictator during World War II (1889-1945)
question
Nazism
answer
The German brand of fascism.
AP Government
Equal Pay For Equal Work
Government Regulation Of The Economy
Political Behavior
Political Party System
Public Interest Groups
Racial And Ethnic Groups
Chapter 9-Political Parties – Flashcards 58 terms

Thomas Owen
58 terms
Preview
Chapter 9-Political Parties – Flashcards
question
A political party is
answer
an organization that consists of individuals interested in controlling government by winning elections.
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A general election is held in
answer
November of even-numbered years.
question
In Texas, a candidate may only win an office in a general election if he/she receives
answer
a plurality of the vote.
question
The American political party system consists of
answer
national, state, county, and precinct levels.
question
In March 2012, a three-judge federal panel ordered a _______ primary election date for Texas.
answer
May
question
Primaries and conventions that nominate candidates, adopt platforms, and select delegates to higher level conventions are known as
answer
temporary party organizations.
question
Which of the following would be performed at a party's precinct convention?
answer
Nomination of delegates to the county convention
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Precinct conventions in Texas are usually
answer
lightly or sparsely attended.
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Resolutions adopted at the precinct convention will be submitted first to the
answer
county or district convention.
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District conventions are held in
answer
highly populated areas of the state like Bexar, Harris, and Dallas counties.
question
The main business of county and district conventions is to
answer
select delegates to the state convention.
question
According to the Texas Election Code, each political party in Texas must hold a ___________ in June of even-numbered years.
answer
state convention
question
Which of the following tasks is not performed every two years at the state party convention?
answer
Election of state legislators
question
Which of the following happens at the party state convention during presidential election years only?
answer
Selection of potential presidential electors
question
Each state receives a number of electoral votes equal to the
answer
number of seats each state has in Congress.
question
How many electoral votes will Texas have in the presidential election of 2016?
answer
38
question
In 2014, how did delegates to the state party conventions communicate their experiences and describe the proceedings to those outside the conventions?
answer
Via social media such as Facebook and Twitter
question
Which of the following is not one of a party precinct chair's duties?
answer
Representing the party in lawsuits
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The party's county executive committee is
answer
comprised of all of the precinct chairs.
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As mandated by Texas state law, each party's state executive committee must
answer
be comprised equally of men and women.
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The main role of a state party's chair is to be the party's
answer
key strategist and key spokesperson.
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Returns from the party primaries for statewide office are counted (or "canvassed") by the
answer
state party executive committee.
question
Which political label would best describe a politician that is in favor of government regulation of the economy, but limited government involvement on social issues?
answer
Liberal
question
Liberals would most likely support which of the following policies?
answer
laws protecting a woman's right to equal pay for equal work
question
When Congress passed the Reconstruction Acts, former slave owners and supporters of the Confederacy were
answer
purged as officeholders and denied the vote.
question
Political alliances during the Republic of Texas were based on
answer
personalities
question
The history of the Texas political party system has tended toward
answer
Texas being a one-party state.
question
One of the reasons why Anglo voters opposed Governor E. J. Davis was that he
answer
appointed African Americans to office throughout the state.
question
During the period of Reconstruction that followed the Civil War (1865-1873), the __________ Party controlled Texas politics.
answer
Republican
question
After Reconstruction, which political party dominated in Texas for more than 100 years?
answer
Democratic
question
Which political party during the latter part of the 19th century focused on agrarian issues and posed a challenge to the Democratic party of Texas?
answer
Populist
question
At the turn of the 20th century, the Populist Party in Texas declined, largely due to
answer
the Democratic Party adopting its issues.
question
Beginning in the late 1940s, a majority of conservative Democrats in Texas began to support the
answer
national Republican candidates.
question
The fiercest political fighting in Texas between 1900 and 1950 was between
answer
liberal and conservative Democrats.
question
Who was the first Texas Republican elected in a statewide vote in the last half of the 20th century?
answer
John Tower
question
What year did Texans elect their first Republican governor since Reconstruction?
answer
1978
question
What year did Texans elect the first woman ever to represent the state in the U.S. Senate?
answer
1993
question
Which Texas governor, elected in 1994, was successful as the Republican Party's candidate for President in 2000?
answer
George W. Bush
question
In __________, for the first time since the primary system was established in Texas, Republican primaries were conducted in all 254 Texas counties.
answer
1996
question
In which of the following decades did the Republican Party in Texas begin to win almost all of the statewide offices it challenged?
answer
1990s
question
The closest presidential election of modern times was in
answer
2000, when Republican George W. Bush defeated Democrat Al Gore by four electoral votes.
question
In the Texas general election of 2000, which two parties had more candidates for statewide office than did the Democratic Party?
answer
Green and Libertarian
question
. Republicans won all statewide races in the _______ general election
answer
2002
question
In the Texas general election of 2002, which trio was dubbed "the dream team" because of their expected appeal to Latino, African American, and Anglo voters?
answer
Sanchez, Kirk, and Sharp
question
Which of the following is not true of the 2008 election?
answer
Democrats gained a majority in the Texas Senate for the second straight election.
question
In 2008, one reason why Obama won in Harris, Travis, Bexar, and Dallas counties was because of
answer
solid support from Latino and African American voters.
question
In 2010, Republicans in the Texas House of Representatives
answer
gained a supermajority for the first time since Reconstruction.
question
Which is true of the past three primary elections in Texas?
answer
More Republicans than Democrats turned out to vote.
question
The trend of voters abandoning their traditional political party allegiance is referred to as
answer
dealignment
question
Which of the following geographic areas is not a Democratic stronghold in Texas?
answer
German Hill Country
question
Which geographic area of Texas is not a Republican stronghold?
answer
Hispanic counties of South Texas
question
A political party that is not one of the two major parties is referred to as a
answer
third party.
question
When a person votes for only candidates from one party, they are engaging in
answer
straight-ticket voting.
question
Which statement best describes the Libertarian Party?
answer
It supports limited government and maximum individual liberties.
question
In which of the following ways have third parties been least successful?
answer
Winning elections to national offices
question
Of the third parties listed below, which probably has had the least influence on Texas politics?
answer
Fascist
question
Which statement best describes the Green Party?
answer
It advocates environmental protection and government reform policies.
question
Which of the following were independent candidates who had a significant impact on a Texas election?
answer
Richard S. "Kinky" Friedman and Carol Keeton Strayhorn
A Level History
AP Comparative Government And Politics
AP Government
Comparative Politics
Live Below The Poverty Line
New Business Opportunities
Political Party System
AP Comparative Government Chapter 4: Russia – Flashcards 162 terms

Anthony Richie
162 terms
Preview
AP Comparative Government Chapter 4: Russia – Flashcards
question
Soviet Union collapsed, reverberations heard around the world, left the Russian federation as the largest piece
answer
1991
question
former member of the Soviet Politburo who declared the end of the old Soviet-style regime, first president of Russian Federation, shock therapy, uneven leader who used authoritarian rule, small group of family members
answer
Boris Yeltsin
question
reforms put in place by Boris Yeltsin that pointed the country in the direction of democracy and free-market economy
answer
Shock Therapy
question
form of government in which a few people have the power, Yeltsin created one using family
answer
Oligarchy
question
elected two times, often acted aggressively in containing oligarchs' political and economic powers, increased centralization of powers, stepped down after two terms honoring Constitution of 1993, more conservative than Yeltsin
answer
Vladimir Putin
question
Putin's successor, hand-picked
answer
Dmitri Medvedev
question
a small group of men who climbed the ranks of the party
answer
Politburo
question
an ordered path from local party soviets to the commanding heights of leadership
answer
Nomenklatura
question
was at low ebb in beginning of 21st century, regime change, drastic departure from past hurt, Putin has stabilized it with his election, smooth transitions from president to president had added to it
answer
Legitimacy
question
strong, autocratic leaders of Russia, large legitimacy
answer
Tsars
question
communist rule that provided the legitimacy base for the party
answer
Marxism-Leninism
question
rule by a few instead of the many, "vanguard" rulers, proposed by Lenin
answer
Democratic Centralism
question
more of a totalitarian ruler, more complete, invasive form of strong-man rule than the tsars ever were
answer
Stalinism
question
provided for a strong president, although the power was checked by popular election and lower house of legislature, required referendum of people to endorse it
answer
Constitution of 1993
question
lower house of the legislature, had actually existed during 19th century
answer
Duma
question
absolute power defended with brutality and force, based on geography because Huns, Vikings, Mongols would conquer them, Russians needed firm, unchallenged leaders
answer
Absolute, Centralized Rule
question
numerous invasions meant different cultures, rapidly expanding borders stretched the empire to include more and more people, constant state of change with ethnicity, borders impossible to draw
answer
Extensive Cultural Heterogeneity
question
reflects the diversity, with countless "republics" and "autonomous regions" based on ethnicity
answer
Russian Federation
question
"lover of Slaves", led to a pride in Slavic customs, language, religion, history, led Russia to resist outside influence
answer
Slavophile
question
wanted to "modernize" Russia with a stronger army, navy, roads, communication, "Window on the West", intrigued by the west, learned shipbuilding, brought engineers, carpenters, etc.
answer
Peter the Great
question
St. Petersburg, a city built on newly conquered lands near Baltic Sea
answer
Window on the West
question
followed Peter the Great and his efforts, led to a major empire, set in place a conflict, managed to gain access to Black Sea, was interested in Enlightenment development
answer
Catherine the Great
question
challenged the traditional views of Russians
answer
George Kennan
question
seized power and renamed the country Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
answer
Bolsheviks
question
USSR
answer
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
question
communist leaders under Lenin replaced the tsars, ruled according to socialist principles, leaning toward absolute, centralized rule, old social classes swept away, tried to blend westernization with Slavophile
answer
Revolutions
question
Russia is largest country in world, many different climates and ethnicities, borders touch many nations, coldest on earth, desire to conquer countries that have blocked access to sea, oil, gas, timber
answer
Geographic Setting
question
Russians traded with Constantinople, adopting their religion, Russia did not share values of European Renaissance, Reformation, Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment, came to value strong state
answer
Eastern Orthodoxy
question
The idea that the rights of the nation are supreme over the rights of the individuals who make up the nation, no separation of church and state
answer
Statism
question
spheres of privacy free from control of state, western idea
answer
Civil Society
question
Communists instilled appreciation for equality, most resent differences in wealth, different from equality of opportunity, not conducive to capitalism
answer
Equality of Result
question
the doctrine of the equality of mankind and the desirability of political and economic and social equality
answer
Egalitarianism
question
Russian citizens are hostile to leadership, citizens have little faith in their political system, Putin has highest approval ratings, police have little in non-governmental agents
answer
Skepticism About Power
question
new emphasis on freedom of speech and press, instituted by Gorbachev, received complaints from everyone
answer
Glasnost
question
people characterize based on nationalities, discriminate based on stereotypes, admire Baltic people, disdain for Muslim-Turkic, passed laws discouraging people from settling in regions, anti-Semitism
answer
Importance of Nationality
question
has had trouble with gradual and ordered change, tendency to descend into chaos or revolution, tsars understood dangers of chaos in Russia, resorted to force, had to keep out Renaissance ideas, gradual attempts at industrialization ended in assassination, Five-ear Plans were successful
answer
Troubles with Gradual Change
question
freed Russian serfs and experimented with local assemblies, assassinated in 1881, seriously sponsored reform
answer
Alexander II
question
14th century to 20th century rule, control was passed through the Romanov family, transitions were accompanied by brutality
answer
Autocratic Rule by Tsars
question
20th century, V.I. Lenin seized control after Nicholas II, regime toppled in 1991
answer
Communist Party Rule
question
Yeltsin put in western-style reforms in place, procedural democracy, free market in 1991
answer
Change to Democracy
question
first tsars were princes of Moscow, cooperated with Mongol rulers, were rewarded with power, when Mongols weakened, they declared themselves "tsars", autocratic and controlled land tightly, isolated as result, long distances separated it
answer
Tsarist rule
question
headed by the tsars
answer
Russian Orthodox Church
question
one who rules absolutely, with clear goals for the country in mind, Catherine and Peter the Great
answer
Enlightened Despot
question
Russia brought into contact with West when Napoleon invaded, Alexander I resisted, Western thought influenced Russian intellectuals, no rooms for politics under tsars, tsars sent secret police to investigate and exile the critics
answer
19th Century Tsars
question
resulted from intellectuals' frustration with absolute rule; ruthlessly crushed by many of Nicholas I
answer
Decembrist Revolt of 1825
question
Russia defeated in this war, convinced many of tsar's critics that Russian ways were backwards and in need of reform
answer
Crimean War
question
assemblies, local ones set up by Alexander II
answer
Zemstvas
question
an educated and intellectual elite
answer
Intelligentsia
question
son of Alexander II, undid many reforms of his father, intensified efforts of secret police
answer
Alexander III
question
Russia's ineffectiveness in fighting Russo-Japanese War, World War I, Nicolas was in wrong place at wrong time, weak ruler with no control over his armies
answer
Cause of Revolution of 1917
question
ruler of Russia who was deposed during the Revolution, weak ruler who had no control over his armies
answer
Nicholas II
question
predicted socialist revolutions would take place first in nations like Germany, France and England
answer
Marxism
question
VI Lenin's pamphlet, argued for democratic centralism, vanguard leadership that would lead the revolution, believed revolution could occur because of terrible conditions
answer
What Is To Be Done?
question
led by Russian military leaders and funded by Allied Powers
answer
White Army
question
army led by Lenin, winning side
answer
Red Army
question
instituted by Lenin, allowed a great deal of private ownership to exist under a centralized leadership, brought prosperity to farmers, non industrialization
answer
New Economic Policy
question
drastically changed Lenin's democratic centralism, Communist Party at center of control, no other political parties, 7% were members, ran all governments
answer
Joseph Stalin
question
the process of party members selecting promising recruits from lower levels
answer
Nomenklatura
question
most important top government officials, a group of 300 party leaders that met twice a year
answer
Central Committee
question
above the Central Committee, heart and soul of Communist party, twelve men who ran the country, decisions carried out by government agencies and department
answer
Politburo
question
head of the Politburo, assumed full power as dictator of county
answer
General Secretary
question
state run farms, more effectively, did away with private land ownership, farms were intended to feed workers in the cities who contributed to industrilaization
answer
Collectivization
question
peasants who resisted that owned large farms, were forced to move to cities or labor camps
answer
Kulaks
question
Stalin's economic plans, set ambitious goals for production of oil, steel, electricity
answer
Five Year Plan
question
the Central State Planning Commission, became nerve center for the economy, determined production and distribution of all goods in the Soviet Union
answer
Gosplan
question
the two-pronged program of collectivization and industrialization carried out be central planning and executed with force and brutality
answer
Stalinism
question
primary goal was internal development, advocated "socialism in one country", tried to ignore fascist threats, signed non-aggression pact with Germany in 1939, attacked by Germany following year, joined sides with allies, tensions at conferences escalated to Cold War
answer
Stalin's Foreign Policy
question
execution of millions of citizens, up to one million party members, became obsessed with disloyalty in party ranks, ordered execution of his own generals, held total power, many speculated he had gone made by the end
answer
Purges
question
chose as party secretary and premier, gave famous secret speech, DeStalinization, criticized for his reforms and diplomatic failure in Cuban Missile Crisis
answer
Nikita Khrushchev
question
Khrushchev revealed existence of a letter written by Lenin before he died, critical of Stalin, used it to denounce his practices
answer
Secret Speech
question
a process that led to reforms such as loosening government censorship of press, decentralization of economic decision-making, restructuring of collective farms
answer
DeStalinization
question
relaxation of tensions between US and Soviet Union
answer
Peaceful Coexistence
question
replaced Khrushchev, much more conservative, ended reforms and tried to cope with increased economic power
answer
Leonid Brezhnev
question
replaced Brezhnev, unlike any Soviet leader before, acted "western', open to many reforms, inherited many problems, three-pronged program (Glasnost, Democratization, Perestroika)
answer
Mikhail Gorbachev
question
"openness", allowed more discussion of political, social, and economic issues as well as criticism of government, caused many problems for Gorbachev, people vented hostility toward government, caused open revolt
answer
Glasnost
question
believed he could keep Old Soviet structure with more democracy, new Congress of People's deputies, new position of President
answer
Democratization
question
economic reform, most radical, least successful, tried to keep old structure and modernize it, transferred economic power to private hands, authorization of privately owned companies, penalties for under-performing factories, etc.
answer
Perestroika
question
1991 "conservatives" from within Politburo led coup d'etat that tried to remove Gorbachev, failed when popular protests broke out, soldiers defected, protesters led by Boris Yeltsin, December 1991 11 republics had declared independence, Gorbachev forced to announce end of Union
answer
Failed Coup
question
created a three-branch government, with a president, prime minister, lower legislative house called the Duma, and a Constitutional Court
answer
Constitution of 1993
question
many are affected by contradictory influences from their political culture, say they support democratic government although they do not believe one exists, like the idea of strong state, etc.
answer
Citizens
question
nationality, social class, rural/urban divisions
answer
Cleavages
question
80% are Russian, others include Tatars, Ukrainians, Armenians, Chuvashes, etc., determine organization of country into "federation", "autonomous regions", many would like their independence, nationalists have take to kidnappings, suicide bombings, xenophobic attacks in Russia, fatal school of soccer fan, etc., "Russians for Russians"
answer
Nationality
question
a primarily Muslim region that has fought for years for its freedom, Russia has had considerable difficulty keeping Chechnya a part of Russia, involved in terrorist acts, referendum to gain legitimacy for Russian government in Chechnya
answer
Chechnya
question
former rebel, became president of Chechnya in 2007, fighting has not stopped, endorsed by Putin
answer
Ramzan Kadyrov
question
Tsarist Russia was overwhelmingly Russian Orthodox, tsar served as spiritual head of state, Soviet Union prohibited religious practices of all kinds, citizens lost their religious affiliations, LARGELY NON-RELIGIOUS, Moscow contains ultimately authority in church matters
answer
Religion
question
had split after Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, vowing never to return as long as the "godless regime" was in power, reunited with Russian Orthodox Church
answer
Russian Church Abroad
question
Moscow has large population who are laborers, Caucasus seen as a hot spot of trouble, problems with Chechnya made it had for Putin to cultivate relationship, Bashkortostan and Tatarstan had calmer relationships
answer
Muslim Concentration
question
president of Tatarstan, accompanied Putin around Middle East in restructuring Russia's image of Muslim
answer
Mintimer Shaimiev
question
Soviet attempts to destroy class differences were successful, noble/peasant difference no longer exists, but Party and non-Party members made new cleavage, economic favors granted to those in power, however egalitarian views and nomenklatura didn't take background into account
answer
Social Class
question
people who have recently amassed fortunes from new business opportunities, many survived and new opportunities are emerging, Putin era took aim at any who didn't pay taxes
answer
New Entrepreneur Class
question
industrialization has led to increasing urban population, divide between them is wide, city dwellers are more educated, in touch with west, etc.
answer
Rural/Urban Cleavages
question
predicted the demise of Capitalist West, belief fed into Russian nationalism and supported the notion that the Russian government and way of life would prevail
answer
Marxism
question
information about people's views is scarce, people are alienated from political system, people support democratic ideals, including free elections and civil liberties, do not believe government can create these things,
answer
Mistrust of Government
question
Russians expect the state to take an active role in their lives, citizens function more as subjects than participants, expect great deal from government
answer
Statism
question
nearly all parties support market transition, privatization and limited government regulation is rapid market reform, "shock therapy"
answer
Economic Beliefs
question
Slavophile vs. Westernizer, some parties emphasis nationalism and defense of Russian interests, etc.
answer
Westernization
question
Russians did vote in 20th century, but elections were not competitive until Gorbachev, still noncompetitive because it was choice between official candidate and alternate
answer
Voting
question
many criticized government's economic policies that led to sinking, Vladivostok, 1000 protesters marched through the streets, police riots, etc.
answer
Political Protest
question
since 1991 turnout has been highest than in the United States, presidential elections has been higher than Duma elections, etc.
answer
Voter Turnout
question
private organizations and associations outside of politics, leas to low political participation, Russians don't attend church, belong to clubs, etc., 1% belong to political party, however appears to be growing, emerged as result of glasnost on issues like environment, ethnicity, gender, human rights, etc.
answer
Civil Society
question
state-sponsored organizations in this arrangement with the government because Soviet authorities argued that only the party could and should represent the people's interest
answer
State Corporatism
question
Russia's largest youth movement, organized mass marches in support of Putin, laid siege to Estonian embassy
answer
Nashi
question
Nashi, Youth Guard, Locals, all are in effort to build a following of loyal, patriotic young people, defuse resistance
answer
Youth Groups
question
youth wing of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
answer
Komsomol
question
89 regions, each bound by treaty to the Federation, most regions are called "Republics", many ruled themselves independently, authoritarian,
answer
Federal Government Structure
question
some regions are much stronger than others
answer
Asymmetric Federalism
question
seven new federal districts encompassing all of Russia, each headed by a presidential appointee
answer
Super-Districts
question
a law allowing the president to remove from office a governor who refuses to subject local law to national constitution
answer
Removal of Governors
question
measure ending direct election of regional governors, president would elect governors and local legislatures would confirm
answer
Appointment of Governors
question
upper legislative house, change prohibited governors and Duma heads from serving themselves
answer
Federation Council
question
Putin initiated change to pure proportional representation electoral system
answer
Elimination of Single-Member District Seats
question
very weak, situation which undermines recent attempts to establish a democracy, political parties were unstable, no solid footing for interest groups
answer
Linkage Institutions
question
Russia has had to put them together overnight, small factional ones, 43 on ballot in 1995, revolved around specific leaders, others reflected a particular group, 26 in 1999, but mostly new ones, no time to develop party loyalties, personalistic rule, new rules shrank number
answer
Parties
question
proportional representation requires all parties to win at least 7% of national vote to win any seats
answer
Change in Voting Rules
question
formed in April 2001 between Fatherland All-Russia Party and Unity Party, intended to support Putin in presidential election, won 221 seats in 2004, gained 64$ of vote in 2007, hard to define ideologically, PRO-PUTIN
answer
United Russia
question
second strongest party, even though never won a presidential election, far less reformist than other parties, opposed many reforms, continues to support stability of old regime, centralized planning and nationalism
answer
Communist Party of Russian Federation
question
CPRF leader, came in second in 1996 and 2000 presidential elections
answer
Gennady Zyuganov
question
most controversial party, headed by Vladimir Zhirinovsky, made headlines for extreme nationalist positions, attacks reformists, implied he would use nuclear weapons on Japan, anti-Semitic remarks, sexist comments, etc.
answer
Liberal Democrats
question
formed in 2006, formed from many organizations, gained 38 seats in Duma
answer
A Just Russia
question
managed to win 8% of vote in regional elections in 2011, came in third, Kremlin product, "statists" and "patriots" aiming to build "great and prosperous" Russia, foil the Communist Party and Just Russia
answer
Patriots of Russia
question
parties strongly sponsored by economic and political power-holders, less ideological
answer
Parties of Power
question
president could call for one by popular vote on important issues, Yeltsin called for one on his job performance, later held in favor of new Constitution, vote to approve Chechnyan Constitution
answer
Referendum
question
five different times, 450 seats, all seats now assigned by proportional representation, eliminated "against all" option as well, must get at least 7% of national vote to gain any seats
answer
Duma Elections
question
two-round model that Duma has, some questioned honesty of elections, media clearly favored both candidates who won, law restricted right of small parties to run presidential candidates
answer
Presidential Elections
question
only allowed under state corporatism in Soviet Union , controlled by government, state-owned industries were bought by insiders after collapse of Soviet Union, collection of oligarchs were major interest group
answer
Interest Groups
question
group of wealth insiders who bought state-owned industries after collapse of Soviet Union, monopolized Yeltsin and took control of largest industries, Putin showed resistance, clashed with entrepreneurs, economic climate has weakened the oligarchs
answer
Oligarchy
question
best known oligarch, he and six others control half of Russia's GNP, used media to ensure Yeltsin's reelection
answer
Boris Berezovsky
question
richest man in Russia, CEO of Yukos Oil Company, arrested as signal from Putin the government was consolidating power
answer
Mikhail Khodorvsky
question
state determines which groups have input into policy-making, vast state-owned holding companies in automobile and aircraft industries, etc., government has forced companies who are too independent of government to sell
answer
State Corporatism
question
either government-controlled companies or companies run by men seen as loyal to Mr. Putin
answer
Insider Privatization
question
controls more than under-world crime, control local businesses, natural resources, banks, thrive on protection money, laundering, deals with Russian governments, murder bankers, journalists, etc.
answer
Russian Mafia
question
Pravda only printed what government officials wanted it to, continued as independent newspaper later on, little to fear from official censorship, biggest stories focus on celebrities, etc., reports for serious journalists are tough, criticizing the government, clearly doesn't have freedom of the press, DON'T CRITICIZE THE GOVERNMENT
answer
Russian Media
question
official newspaper of the Soviet Union, reinvented itself as a tabloid, little to fear from official censorship because of investigative journalism, etc.
answer
Pravda
question
only independent television network, Kremlin took it over, tried to play honest reporting, was ousted by the government, correspondent died
answer
NTV
question
shows freedom of press, most networks didn't even cover it, NTV didn't show up until late, etc.
answer
Beslan School Seizure
question
hybrid of presidential and parliamentary systems, meant to allow for a strong presidency, but still allow some democratic checks on executive power, branches have stabilized but it's too soon to tell whether it will be successful
answer
Semi-Presidential System
question
separates the head of state and head of government
answer
Executive Branch
question
the president, has been far from ceremonial, came to dominate the prime minister under Putin, elected for four-year (six year in 2012), limit of two terms, anyone who gets a million signatures can run
answer
Head of State
question
prime minister, dominated by president
answer
Head of Government
question
Duma must approve it, but if they reject it three times, president may dissolve them, Putin was prime minister when he ran for president, appointed Kasyanov
answer
Appoint Prime Minister and Cabinet
question
have force of law, cabinet has a great deal of concentrated, centralized power, Duma has no power to censure cabinet, created United Aircraft Corporation
answer
Issue Decrees
question
the president can get rid of the Parliament, can order the army to fire on the building until the members give up,
answer
Dissolve the Duma
question
takes over in case of presidential death or resignation, not leader of majority party, instead have much expertise as result of work in bureaucracy
answer
Prime Minister
question
Russian legislature has proved to be weak check on executive, Duma and Federation Council
answer
Bicameral Legislature
question
lower house with 450 deputies, passes bills, approves budget, confirms president's appointments, very limited powers, impeachment process is cumbersome
answer
Duma
question
consists of two members from each of 89 federal administrative units, one representative is selected by the governor of each region and another by regional legislature, represents regions, not populations, has main power of delaying legislation, can change boundaries among republics, ratify use of armed force, appoint new judges
answer
Federation Council
question
nineteen members, appointed by president, confirmed by Federation Council, moved to St. Petersburg away from political influence, POWER TO CHALLENGE CONSTITUTIONALITY, suffers from lack of legal training
answer
Constitutional Court
question
created to serve as final court of appeals in criminal and civil cases, does not have power to challenge constitutionality of laws and political actions
answer
Supreme Court
question
attempted to revive period of law reform, including jury trial, procedural code for criminal and civil rights, great deal of money on reform, Putin's impact on courts was unacceptable to Clinton
answer
Putin's Law Reforms
question
State Security Committee
answer
KGB
question
state and society have been pushed away from law by corruption, allowing police to continue to operate autonomously, security police are generally least corrupt, puts drag on economic development because so much money is siphoned off for bribes
answer
Role of Corruption
question
Soviet government paid for this ahead of everything, 4 million men, did not take lead in politics, shows no sign of becoming a political force, suffered military humiliation, soldiers go unpaid and supply own food
answer
Military
question
prominent general, gained political following before election of 1996, military coup unlikely, Russian Air Force would assert old vigor by long-range patrols by nuclear-capable bombers again, move was seen by many as rise in strength by many in military again, military spending has increased
answer
Alexander Lebed
question
perestroika reforms never fully implemented, dissent within Politburo led to coup, "shock therapy" created chaotic conditions resulted in oligarchs running country, stock market toppled, government defaulted on loans, unemployment soared, ruple collapsed, new industries improved, standard of living rose, stimulus plan had very little effect, economy is run by oil and gas reserves, need to diversify
answer
The Economy
question
dominance of the world was broken, time of chaos and humiliation, relied on loans of US to gain economic footing
answer
Foreign Policy
question
unites the fifteen former republics of the Soviet Union, has little power over its members, Russia, trade agreements bind them, nationality issue divide them, Putin's involvement in elections in Ukraine was controversial, controversy in Estonia
answer
Confederation of Independent States
question
US emerged as only superpower, Bush and Clinton believed in working relationship with Russia, G-8 summits, aid packages for Russia, Russia is entering WTO, clout comes from oil and gas industries, terrorist attacks with 9/11 made tense the relationships between the nations
answer
Relations with West
question
a powerful body responsible for regulating international trade, settling trade disputes, and designing trade policy through meetings
answer
World Trade Organization
question
Belsan school siege, suicide bombing in Moscow, Putin argued tighter grip
answer
Terrorism
question
Russia has suffered dramatic drop in overall population, predicts 18% drop by 2050, low birth rate and poor health habits, alcohol-related death, life expectancy is low, government is encouraging Russians to return home, repatriation program, etc.
answer
Population Issues
question
Putin's party controls huge part of the Duma, government has controlled power of oligarchs, controls major television stations, Russian gas giant Gazprom, not clear whether it marks end of democracy or reaction to terrorism
answer
Re-Centralization of Power
question
a public life that is defined by government, private life in which people are free to make their own individual choices, do not share the idea of life, liberty, and property, became a superpower through strong central government
answer
Development of Civil Society
AP Comparative Government And Politics
Applied Sociology
Introductory Sociology
Social Conflict Theory
Sociology
Social Problem Test Three (Final Study Guide) – Flashcards 50 terms

Viola Marenco
50 terms
Preview
Social Problem Test Three (Final Study Guide) – Flashcards
question
The formal organization that directs the political life of a society is
answer
Government
question
The social institution that organizes the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services is
answer
the economy
question
Capitalism is an economic system in which natural resources and the means of producing goods and services are
answer
privately owned
question
Which type of economic system places natural resources and the means of producing goods and services under collective ownership?
answer
socialism
question
Which type of economic system has government working closely with large, privately owned companies?
answer
state capitalism
question
In the United States, about what percentage of the gross domestic product comes from the privately owned sector of the economy?
answer
82 Percent
question
Which concept refers to a political system in which power is exercised by the people as a whole?
answer
democracy
question
The domination of an entire market by a single company is referred to as
answer
a monopoly
question
Which concept refers to the efforts of special-interest groups and their representatives to influence government officials?
answer
lobbying
question
The Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution extended the vote to
answer
women
question
In the 2012 presidential election,
answer
women were slightly more likely to vote than men were.
question
Which of the following categories of people face legal barriers to voting?
answer
convicted felons
question
Each year, about how many U.S. workers suffer a work-related illness or injury?
answer
1 million
question
The most recent technological change to the U.S. economy was
answer
the Information Revolution
question
In the tertiary sector of the economy, most people in the labor force do what type of work?
answer
service work
question
Which term refers to the expansion of economic activity around the world with little regard for national borders?
answer
globalization
question
In 1970, the federal government created OSHA to oversee and regulate
answer
workplace health and safety
question
According to Karl Marx, alienation in the workplace results from
answer
powerlessness
question
Which term refers to shaping work in terms of the principles of efficiency, predictability, uniformity, and automation?
answer
McDonaldization
question
Which term refers to bias built into the operation of the economy, education, and other social institutions?
answer
institutional discrimination
question
Many states have "right to work" laws which, among other things,
answer
limit the power of unions to require membership as a condition of hiring
question
Which term refers to a barrier—often involving institutional discrimination—that prevents women and other minorities from moving up in the workplace?
answer
glass ceiling
question
What organizations seek to improve wages and working conditions through various strategies, including collective bargaining and strikes?
answer
labor unions
question
Telecommuting has what major disadvantage for workers?
answer
It blurs the line between home and work
question
Which term refers to one or two parents and their children?
answer
nuclear family
question
Which of the following terms refers to parents and children, plus grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins, who often live close to one another and operate as a family unit?
answer
extended family
question
Families are built around a lawful relationship, usually involving economic cooperation, sexual activity, and childbearing. What is this relationship called?
answer
marriage
question
In the United States, about what share of people between twenty-five and forty-four years of age cohabit at some point?
answer
half
question
In 2012, the average number of children born to the typical U.S. woman over her lifetime was about
answer
1.9
question
In 2013, the typical age at first marriage for a woman was
answer
26.6 years old
question
What percentage of African American children are born to a single mother?
answer
72 percent
question
William Julius Wilson claims that the major cause of poverty among African American families is
answer
a lack of available jobs
question
In the United States, most people who receive public assistance are
answer
white
question
About what share of today's marriages will end in divorce, separation, or dissolution within twenty years?
answer
half
question
Under "no-fault" divorce laws
answer
couples declare that their marriage is over due to irreconcilable differences
question
Of the children who are awarded court-ordered child support, about what percentage receive partial payments or no payments at all?
answer
57 percent
question
Most blended families manage to cope with the challenges, but research shows that blended families carry an increased risk of
answer
physical and sexual abuse of children
question
Prenuptial agreements may be a good idea because
answer
there is a significant chance that the marriage will eventually end in divorce
question
Which term refers to the social institution by which society transmits knowledge to its members?
answer
education
question
A major reason that schooling is limited in poor societies of the world is that
answer
parents need their children to work to provide food and income
question
The ability to read and write is referred to as
answer
literacy
question
In the United States, what percentage of the population aged twenty-five to sixty-four has a four-year college or university degree?
answer
32 percent
question
By which year had every state enacted a law requiring children to attend school?
answer
1918
question
About what percentage of U.S. adults now complete high school?
answer
88 percent
question
On the Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT), for all racial and ethnic categories of people, a higher rate of poverty is linked to
answer
lower performance on the test
question
Research shows that the quality of the school matters to student performance, but what matters even more?
answer
the student's home environment
question
About 30 million men and women in the United States do not read, write, or do basic arithmetic well enough to carry out daily responsibilities. This situation is the problem of
answer
functional illiteracy
question
In 1954, which decision by the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that racially segregated schools violated the Constitution, striking down the "separate but equal" standard that dated back to 1896?
answer
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
question
Which term refers to lifetime experiences and opportunities that enhance a student's ability to learn and succeed?
answer
cultural capital
question
What percentage of undergraduates enrolled in U.S. colleges are women?
answer
57 percent
AP Comparative Government And Politics
Applied Sociology
Comparative Politics
Law And Order
Political Science
United States
Us Constitution
GPI Ch 2 – Flashcard 31 terms

Kenneth McQuaid
31 terms
Preview
GPI Ch 2 – Flashcard
question
an organization that maintains a monopoly of violence over a territory
answer
Political scientists, based on the work of Max Weber, define the state as:
question
states to carry out actions or policies independent of outside actors or internal rivals.
answer
Sovereignty is defined as the ability of:
question
the basic rules and norms of politics
answer
Regimes are defined as:
question
the leadership in charge of running the state.
answer
Government can be defined as
question
country
answer
The shorthand term for the combination of regime, state, and government is:
question
domesticated agriculture and sedentary living
answer
The first emergence of human specialization into inequality is tied to
question
pre-state societies were very violent.
answer
Recent research suggests that the rise of political organizations came about because:
question
Europe
answer
Where did the modern state first emerge?
question
legitimate
answer
An institution that is recognized and accepted as right and proper is seen as:
question
traditional, charismatic, and rational legal.
answer
Which of the following are named in the text as a basic form of political legitimacy?
question
habits and customs
answer
Traditional legitimacy rests on
question
territorial divisions are not very important within a country
answer
A unitary state can be defined as a system wherein
question
significant powers are devolved to regional bodies.
answer
Federalism can be defined as a system wherein:
question
autonomy; capacity
answer
State power is often analyzed in terms of _______ and ________.
question
high capacity but low autonomy
answer
The United States is often seen as having
question
wield power independent of the public
answer
State autonomy can be defined as the ability to
question
protection racket
answer
The state is often compared in many ways to a:
question
sovereignty
answer
The army and police both are part of a country's
question
written and unwritten elements
answer
Regimes are comprised of both
question
governments
answer
Which of the following is seen as weakly institutionalized?
question
The past few centuries
answer
States have been the dominant for of political organization for how long?
question
developed through coercion or consensus
answer
One major debate on the origins of political organization deals with whether early political groups
question
The collapse of the Roman Empire
answer
The emergence of the modern state is closely tied to what specific event?
question
constant warfare during the dark ages
answer
The development of the modern state in Europe was encouraged by
question
greater religious commitment to democracy
answer
In comparison to earlier forms of poltical organization, states often enjoyed all of the following advantages EXCEPT
question
rational legitimacy
answer
Modern states are built primarily on what form of legitimacy
question
traditional legitimacy
answer
The text suggests that the difficulty in amending the US Constitution is evidence of the power of
question
send power down to the local level
answer
Devolution is a process by which states
question
failed
answer
A state with an extremely low level of autonomy and capacity is known as a ________ state
question
fulfill basic tasks
answer
Strong states:
question
ability to wield power in order to carry out basic tasks.
answer
State Capacity can be defined as the
AP Comparative Government And Politics
Case Studies
Comparative Politics
Political Behavior
Unit 1 F16 – Flashcards 90 terms

Brenda Gannon
90 terms
Preview
Unit 1 F16 – Flashcards
question
An institution can be defined as any:
answer
organization or activity that is self-perpetuating and valued for its own sake
question
Politics is defined in the text as the:
answer
struggle in any group for the power to make decisions for the larger group
question
What is inductive reasoning?
answer
the means by which we from studying a case to generating a hypothesis
question
Which of the following could be considered a major challenge faced by political scientists in their use of the comparative method?
answer
the difficulty in controlling variables
question
Which of the following could be an example of selection bias?
answer
studying causes for the emergence of democracy by looking only at case studies where democracy emerged
question
Endogeneity refers to:
answer
the problem of distinguishing cause from effect
question
A major criticism of comparative politics at the turn of the twentieth century was that it:
answer
was descriptive rather than explanatory
question
Which of the following served as a major modern turning point for the study of comparative politics?
answer
the growth of European countries as colonial powers
question
Modernization theory can be defined as the view that:
answer
as societies develop, they will become capitalist democracies
question
The shift in comparative politics away from political institutions (such as legislature and constitutions) and toward individual political behavior is known as:
answer
behavioral revolution
question
One big rift within the study of comparative politics is:
answer
quantitative versus qualitative research
question
Which of the following statements about game theory is accurate:
answer
It assumes rational, predictable behavior by individual human beings
question
Recent discussions of the future of comparative politics and political science have called for:
answer
a greater connection to real-world concerns and contribution to the ideals of civic life
question
Which of the following is true of the concept of political institutions?
answer
U.S democracy is an institution in both formal and informal ways
question
A greater focus on individual freedom is most likely to require:
answer
a smaller state
question
A greater focus on collective equality is associated with:
answer
greater government control of private economic assets
question
The substance of politics is inevitably bound up in the struggle between:
answer
individual freedom and collective equality
question
Which of the following forms of research or date would more likely be used by an quantitative research study than a qualitative research study?
answer
economic data
question
In which of the following ways do quantitative research differ from qualitative research?
answer
If favors a wider use of cases not restricted by area specialization
question
In which of the following ways does behavioralism differ from modernization theory?
answer
It was more of a method than a general hypothesis
question
Political scientist, based on the work of Max Weber, define the state as:
answer
an organization that maintains a monopoly of violence over a territory
question
Sovereignty is defined as the ability of:
answer
states to carry out actions or policies within a territory independent of external actors of internal rivals
question
What phenomenon is most responsible for bring the organization of the modern state into adoption by most of the world?
answer
increased international commerce and trade
question
Which of the following can be said about the concept of a regime?
answer
The differences between regimes are most likely to be unwritten and informal, though they can appear in written constitutions
question
Thomas Hobbes believed that people gave up their rights to the coercive power of the state in order to:
answer
escape anarchy
question
Government can be defined as:
answer
the leadership that runs the state
question
The shorthand term for the combination of regime, state and government is:
answer
country
question
In which of the following ways does a government built primarily on charismatic legitimacy differ from on based on traditional legitimacy?
answer
Charismatic legitimacy would likely be much more short-lived
question
Which of the following can be said about the relationships among states, regimes, and governments?
answer
States are more institutional than governments
question
Asymmetric federalism refers to a system in which power is divided unevenly between:
answer
regional bodies
question
Recent research suggest that the rise of political organizations came about in large part because:
answer
pre-state societies were extremely violent
question
The emergence of the modern state is closely tied to which of the following specific developments?
answer
the collapse of the Roman Empire
question
Which of the following is most likely a reason for the emergence of the modern state in Europe rather than in another region
answer
the widespread collapse of law and civilization and the rise of a form of organized crime
question
The development of the modern state in Europe was partly encouraged by:
answer
linguistic and ethnic fragmentations
question
An institution that is recognized and accepted as right and proper by the public is seen as:
answer
legitimate
question
Which of the following list Max Weber's three forms of political legitimacy?
answer
traditional, charismatic, and rational-legal
question
Modern states are built primarily on what for of legitimacy?
answer
rational-legal
question
The text suggests that the difficulty of amending the U.S. constitution is evidence of the power of:
answer
traditional legitimacy
question
Which of the following characteristics is more likely to be seen in a unitary state than in a federalist state?
answer
limited local policymaking
question
Capacity can be defined as the:
answer
ability of the state to wield power in order to carry out the basic tasks of providing security and reconciling freedom and equality
question
Devolution is a process by which states:
answer
move power from the central state to local levels
question
Autonomy can be defined as the ability of a state to:
answer
wield power independent of the public or international actors
question
Which of the following best characterizes the nature of the conflict of recent years in Afghanistan?
answer
Ethnic
question
Why might the term patriotic fail to characterize the Palestinian people?
answer
Patriotism refers to pride in one's state, Palestinians lack a forma state
question
Ethnic identity can be defined as:
answer
a set of institutions that bind people together through a common culture
question
Which of the following concepts is held in common by both communist ideology and liberal and social democratic ideology but is lacking in fascist ideology?
answer
a belief in the potential of individuals
question
Ascription occurs when:
answer
a particular quality or characteristic is assigned at birth
question
Which of the following statements about fundamentalism is accurate?
answer
Fundamentalists seek to solve the problems of the modern world
question
Which of the following statements about ethnicity is accurate?
answer
Ethnic solidarity can lessen willingness to share resources with groups that are ethnically different
question
An institution that binds people together through common political aspirations is:
answer
national identity
question
In Ronald Inglehart's conception of political culture, what form of society stands in opposition to a traditional society?
answer
secular-rational
question
Which of the following is one of the two most important components of national identity?
answer
self-government
question
National Identity is:
answer
often derived from ethnic identity
question
Citizenship is best defined as:
answer
an individual's or a group's relation to the state
question
Political culture can be defined as:
answer
a society's norms for political activity
question
Which of the following statements about citizenship, national identity, and patriotism is accurate?
answer
Citizenship is likely to be more flexible than ethnic identity
question
Which of the following concepts has the most potential to be inclusive or flexible?
answer
citizenship
question
In which of the following ways do both conservatives and liberals differ from radicals?
answer
They do not see the need for change in the current system
question
A state that encompasses one dominant nation that is claims to embody and represent is known as:
answer
a nation-state
question
Which of the following concepts of phenomena was first and most directly connected to state development?
answer
growing ethnic identity
question
In which of the following ways does national conflict differ from ethnic conflict?
answer
National conflict has an independent state as a core goal; ethnic conflict does not
question
Political attitudes refers to views regarding:
answer
the necessary pace and scope of change in the balance between freedom and equality
question
Radicals are those in the political spectrum who favor:
answer
dramatic change of the existing order
question
Conservatives are those in the political spectrum who favor:
answer
Little or no change to existing institutions
question
Reactionaries are those in the political spectrum who favor:
answer
restoring structures and values that they believe once existed
question
A person following a liberal ideology would likely approve of:
answer
a low degree of state autonomy
question
______ are the most fundamental components of political economy.
answer
Markets and property
question
Markets can best be defined as:
answer
the interactions between the forces of supply and demands
question
In the United States, the government cannot take a citizen's property without just cause and compensation. This is an example of:
answer
a property right
question
Public goods are best defined as:
answer
goods, provided or secured by the state, that are available for society and indivisible
question
Which of the following would be considered a public good in the United States?
answer
highways
question
What is the oldest of the political-economic systems, and what system first rose to challenge it?
answer
mercantilism, first challenged by liberalism
question
In which of the following ways do bother communism and mercantilism differ from liberalism?
answer
They have high state autonomy and capacity
question
The total market value of all good and products produced in a year is known as:
answer
the gross domestic product
question
The _____ is in charge of regulating the supply of money in a country.
answer
central bank
question
Extremely tight control over the money supply may result in ______, a condition that has plagued Japan since 1998.
answer
deflation
question
What is a primary tactic used by central banks to combat inflation?
answer
raising interest rates
question
When governments print more money because they lack revenue, one result may be:
answer
hyperinflation
question
Taxes on imported goods are known as:
answer
tariffs
question
Restrictions that limit the quantities of foreign goods coming into a country are an example of:
answer
quotas
question
Since the major economic downturn of the last decade, on trend in the U.S, Canada, and Japan has been:
answer
a reverse or economic liberalization
question
Liberalism view of the relationship between freedom and equality favors:
answer
freedom over equality
question
Social democracy can be defined as a system that:
answer
attempts to balance freedom and equality
question
Over the past two decades, most countries around the world have:
answer
increased economic liberalization
question
Which of the following statements about neocorporatism is accurate?
answer
Neocorporatism involves a greater role for organized labor in economic policy than in the liberal model
question
Which political-economic system views private property as a form of exploitation?
answer
communism
question
The Gini index is one way that social scientist measure:
answer
the amount of economic inequality in a society
question
Mercantilism is best associated with which of the following policies?
answer
tariff barriers
question
Which political-economic system views the economy as an instrument to serve state power and national sovereignty?
answer
mercantilism
question
Purchasing power parity is a way to measure:
answer
the buying power of income across countries
AP Comparative Government And Politics
AP Government
Political Behavior
Political Science
Public Opinion
Mr. Maitz AP Government chapter 11-12 61 terms

Carmen Dawson
61 terms
Preview
Mr. Maitz AP Government chapter 11-12
question
what the public thinks about a particular issue or set of issues at any point in time.
answer
public opinion
question
interviews or surveys with samples of citizens that are used to estimate the feelings and beliefs of the entire population.
answer
public opinion polls
question
an Iowan who is considered the founder of modern-day polling.
answer
George Gallup
question
a popular magazine that first began national presidential polling in 1916
answer
literary digest
question
unscientific survey used to gauge public opinion on a variety of issues and policies
answer
straw poll
question
a subset of the whole population to be questioned for the purposes of prediction or gauging opinion.
answer
sample
question
polling that used landline telephones in American homes.
answer
Telephone polls
question
polls conducted as voters leave selected polling places on election day.
answer
exit polls
question
continuous surveys that enable a campaign or news organization to chart a candidate's daily rise or fall in support.
answer
tracking polls
question
was the first to use a scientific survey
answer
John Zogby
question
polls taken for the purpose of providing information on an opponent that would lead respondents to vote against that candidate.
answer
push polls
question
a method of poll selection that gives each person in a group the same chance of being selected. the flaw in this method is that they may under-sample or over-sample key populations
answer
random sampling
question
a variation of random sampling; the population is divided into subgroups and weighted based on demographic characteristics of the national population
answer
stratified sampling
question
a measure of the accuracy of a public opinion poll
answer
margin of error
question
the accuracy of a poll depending on the quality of the sample that was drawn
answer
sampling error
question
herein respondents provide a response from 0 to 100 about how they feel about a particular issue.
answer
feeling thermometer
question
the process through which individuals acquire their political beliefs and values.
answer
political socialization
question
an organized effort by office holders, candidates, activists, and voters to pursue their common interests by gaining and exercising power through the electoral process
answer
political party
question
first party formed in America
answer
federalists
question
a party organization that recruits voter loyalty with tangible incentives and is characterized by a high degree of control over member activity.
answer
political machines
question
politics that focuses on the candidates, their particular issues, and character rather than party affiliation.
answer
candidate-centered politics
question
dramatic shifts in partisan preferences that drastically alter the political landscape
answer
party realignment
question
an election that signals a party realignment through voter polarization around new issues and personalities.
answer
critical election
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the gradual rearrangement of party coalitions, based more on demographic shifts than on shocks to the political system
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secular realignment
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is usually elected by the sitting president or newly nominated presidential candidate, who is accorded the right to name the individual for at least the duration of his or her campaign. he or she is the prime spokesperson and arbitrator for the party during the four years between elections.
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National Chair
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a party meeting held in the presidential election year for the purposes of nominating a presidential and vice presidential ticket and adopting a platform.
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National Convention
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Delegate to the Democratic Party's national convention that is reserved for a party official and whose vote at the convention is unpledged to a candidate.
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superdelegate
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institutional collection of policy-oriented researchers and academics who are sources of policy ideas.
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Think tank
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A statement of the general and specific philosophy and policy goals of a political party, usually promulgated at the national convention.
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national party platform
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a citizens personal affinity for a political party, usually expressed by a tendency to vote for the candidates of that party.
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party identification
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A voting system that apportions legislative seats according to the percentage of the vote won by a particular political party
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proportional representation
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an electoral system in which the party that recieves at least one more vote than any other party wins the election
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winner take all system
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a general decline in party identification and loyalty in the elctorate.
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dealignment
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considered the founder of modern day polling
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George Gallup
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the republican party's first presidential candidate
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John C Fremont
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party politics were nearly suspended at the national level during this era.
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Era of Good feeling
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the pinnacle of the party system in the US is
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National Party Chair
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Party conventions generally
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serve only symboling purposes
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think tanks influence
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party policy positions
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the main reason the Republican party historically raises more money than the democratic party
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they have more wealthy donors
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the difference between the democratic and republican parties is most evident in
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party platforms
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one particularly party-oriented president was
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Ronald Regan
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the single greatest influence on an individual's first party identification is...
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parents
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most researchers now study the gender gap by considering why
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democrats have trouble attracting white men
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African Americans in general strongly identify with the
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Democratic party
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The American Independent party took root as a result of this issue
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desegregation
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third parties do best when...
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trust in major parties is low
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independent voters sometimes
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have stronger partisan leanings
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James Madison's chief concern at the inception of the United States was the
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formation of political factions
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Unscientific surveys used to gauger public opinion on a variety of issues are calld
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straw polls
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every two years since 1952, there have been regular surveys of the american electorate known as the
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National election studies
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tracking polls we