Politics & Pol. Sci
Ideology
Government & Power
Bureaucracy & Courts
IR Theories
100

This is Van Belle's definition of politics.

What are goal-oriented actions or choices with public consequences?

100

This ideology, rooted in Hobbes and Locke, holds that individuals should be largely free from governmental constraints.

What is classical liberalism?

100

This is the voluntary acceptance of government authority.

What is legitimacy?

100

These are the three functions of courts according to VB.

What are dispute resolution, policymaking, and monitoring government?

100

This IR theory holds that self-interested states pursue power in an anarchic international system.


What is Realism?

200

Political Science studies what IS, not what should be — this makes it this kind of discipline.

What is empirical?

200

According to this view, government exists to protect individual liberty and property.


What is the Lockean view?

200

This is the key variable in politics — the ability to get something done.


what is power?

200

Unlike civil law, common law relies heavily upon this.


What is precedent (stare decisis)?

200

This IR theory argues that world politics is shaped by ideas, values, culture, and identity — not just power.

What is Constructivism?

300

These are the 4 subfields of Political Science.

What are American Politics, Comparative Politics, International Relations, and Political Theory?

300

Associated with Edmund Burke, this ideology warns against rapid change because of unintended consequences.


What is classical conservatism?

300

This is the process of keeping citizens isolated from one another so they cannot form threatening groups.



What is atomization?

300

An example of law in books versus law in action.

What is a law that officially guarantees equal rights but is selectively enforced in practice?

300

The heart of the Marxist challenge to Realism is that it ignores this.

What is economic class (class struggle / economic inequality)?

400

This classic definition says politics is about 'who gets what, when, and how.'

What is Lasswell's (classic) definition of politics?

400

This 20th-century ideology emphasizes a charismatic leader, group superiority, and discourages democratic dissent.


What is fascism?

400

Hiding your true political feelings while publicly expressing what those in power want to hear.


What is preference falsification?

400

The relationship formed by the bureaucracy, interest groups, and elected officials.


What is the Iron Triangle?

400

This IR approach assumes states don't make decisions — individuals do — within the context of domestic politics.

What is Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA)?

500

Being unaware of your political, social, and economic environment is called this.

What is rational ignorance?

500

Unlike communism, this ideology believes social and economic equality can be achieved through democratic means.

What is democratic socialism?

500

This concept, from Van Belle, argues anarchy drives the formation of government through the collective pursuit of security.

What is anarchy as an impetus for government?

500

This theory says bureaucracies aim to stay in the dark (no negative attention) and stay fed (funded).

What is the Cockroach Theory of bureaucracy?

500

This is what international law depends on to be effective — since there is no world government.

What is a country or coalition with the power and will to enforce it?

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