Foundations of International Relations
The Paradigms
International Norms & Global Advocacy
Global Institutions
Power Structures and Global Orders
100

___ is defined as no legal authority higher than the state. 

Anarchy

100

This paradigm does NOT view states as black boxes.

Constructivism or Neoliberalism

100

What does TAN stand for?

Transnational Advocacy Network

100

This IGO's mission is "to investigate and try those charged with genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and crimes of aggression."

ICC (International Criminal Court)

100

Name one organization that emerged from/during the beginning of the Liberal World Order.

Answers include: NATO, UN, WTO, IMF, etc.

200

___ is defined as the expectation that states have legal and political supremacy within their territorial boundaries.

Sovereignty

200

Name one real-world example that the Realism paradigm struggles to explain.

Some answers include: INGOs, lack of war, examples of states not being black boxes, etc.

200

What are the three stages of a norm's life cycle?

Norm emergence, norm cascade, norm acceptance/internalization

200

Which states are part of the UNSC Permanent 5 and what are their privileges in the UNSC?

US, Russia, China, France, UK; permanent membership and veto power.

200

What event precipitated the emergence of the Liberal World Order?

World War II

300

Ambazonian leaders have declared independence from Cameroon. What is this an example of?

Self-determination

300

What do liberalism and realism each believe the highest goal of government is?

Liberalism: ensuring the right of an individual to life, liberty and property.
Realism: ensure national interest (i.e. protecting sovereignty & expanding power)

300

In Myanmar, a genocide occurred against the Rohingya people perpetrated by the Myanmar government. Different international actors worked together to address the situation and hold the Myanmar government accountable. What is this an example of?

The boomerang model

300

What does IMF stand for, and what organization is it under?

International Monetary Fund; United Nations

300

What polarity does the Cold War showcase?

Bipolarity

450

What are the three levels of analysis?

System, state, and individual

450

What are the three ideas that explain cooperation according to classical Liberalism? (AKA the Kantian Triad)

Institutions, free trade, and democracy

450

When did the UNSC pass a resolution according to the R2P?

Against Qaddafi in Libya

450

What is the Belt and Road Initiative (including who launched it)?

An initiative launched by the CCP/China to invest in the global economy to encourage global infrastructure and promote trade connectivity while encouraging China's leadership in global affairs.

450
Who is the current biggest threat to the Liberal World Order?

China

600

Answer BOTH parts: The Cold War and the Prisoner's Dilemma are prime examples of ___, which is defined as ___.

The Cold War and the Prisoner's Dilemma are prime examples of the Security Dilemma, which is defined as one state's expansion of military being perceived as a threat by other countries, prompting them to also expand their military.

600

"Modern lack of war suggests a predisposition against military violence." What theory (which has two parts) serves to explain this quote?

Democratic Peace Theory

600

Name one of Trump's norm violations and the consequences of it.

SOooooo many answers...

600

What theorem did the Battle for Danertland most showcase?

Bargaining Model of War

600

Has there ever been an example of a unipolar world and what was it?

The US after the fall of the USSR

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