These are the three revolutions important for introducing self-determination and democratic forms of government.
What are the American Revolution, the French Revolution, and the Haitian Revolution?
100
This is a system operating in the absence of any central government.
What is anarchy?
100
A strong sense of identity linked to a nation.
What is nationalism?
100
The process by which states work together to solve a common problem.
What is multilateralism?
100
Any participant in global politics that is not a state.
What is a nonstate actor?
200
Founded in 1945 following World War II, this is an international organization composed of 193 member states dedicated to addressing issue of peace and human rights.
What is the United Nations?
200
This is the type of realism that is based in the belief that human nature is fundamentally focused on the drive for power and the will to dominate.
What is classical realism?
200
This is a type of state in which citizens are less nationalistic and more cosmopolitan in their outlook on both foreign and domestic policy.
What is a postmodern state?
200
The first permanent collective international security organization, introduced following World War I.
What is the League of Nations?
200
The new term for citizenship proposed by Professor Sadiq in "Paper Citizens," in which citizenship relies on documents obtained through "networks of complicity"?
What is documentary citizenship?
300
This security organization was established by treaty in 1949 comprising countries from Western Europe and North America.
What is the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)?
300
One aspect of liberalism, this thesis asserts that liberal democratic states do not go to war with one another.
What is the democratic peace thesis?
300
The four phases of foreign policy are: (1) articulation, (2) formulation, (3) implementation, and this.
What is evaluation?
300
This was introduced by the UN after World War II as the first declaration that states all human beings are inherently entitled to a certain set of universal rights.
What is the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)?
300
A network of professionals with expertise in a given issue area.
What is an epistemic community?
400
This was a program of financial and other economic aid for Europe after World War II.
What is the Marshall Plan?
400
According to Marxist theory, this is the general term for a social group that is identified by its relationship with the means of production and the distribution of resources.
What is class?
400
The material threats and inducements leaders employ to achieve the goals of their state.
What is hard power?
400
The direct involvement within a state by an outside actor without the consent of the host state.
What is an intervention?
400
The three aspects of blurred membership include: (1) the notion that it does not come from the state, (2) a reliance on kinship ties, and (3)__________.
What is a local basis of membership?
500
This was a meeting of European states that redrew the political map of Africa in order to quell territorial disputes between the European powers.
What is the Congress of Berlin?
500
This type of feminist theory argues that the subordination of women has led to a unique perspective on global politics.
What is standpoint feminism?
500
The condition in an anarchic world, in which all states are seen as threats so there is ceaseless competition for security. When one state seeks to improve its security, it creates insecurity in other states.
What is the security dilemma?
500
The term used for the security of people, including their physical safety, their economic and social well-being, respect for their dignity, and the protection of their human rights.
What is human security?
500
This is the Latin term for the legal designation of assigning citizenship according to where one is born (ie, civic-based)?