KEY DEFINITIONS
ETHNICITY & DEVOLUTION
TECHNOLOGY & RESISTANCE
Government Control
Centripetal vs. Centrifugal Forces
Policy Choices & Comparisons
100

Define the concept of a multinational state.

  • A state with multiple ethnic groups

  • A state with more than one national identity

  • A country containing diverse cultural or linguistic groups

  • A state whose borders include multiple nations

100

Identify one way ethnicity can become a source of conflict within a state.

  • political dominance by one group; discrimination; unequal representation; cultural suppression (language/religion bans); ethnic scapegoating; historic tensions.

100

Identify one type of communication technology commonly used by devolutionary or democracy movements.

Social media, messaging apps, satellite TV, or the internet.

100

Identify one way governments use communication infrastructure to limit movements.

Acceptable answers: internet shutdowns; censorship; surveillance; banning platforms; controlling ISPs; state-run media; blocking websites.

100

Define a centripetal force.

Acceptable answers: force that unifies the state; strengthens national unity; increases loyalty to central government.

100

Define an autonomous region.

Acceptable answers: self-governing region within a state; region with devolved powers; local government authority over internal affairs.

200

Identify one key characteristic that distinguishes a multinational state from a nation-state.

  • Cultural heterogeneity vs. homogeneity

  • Multiple languages vs. one dominant language

  • Competing national identities

  • Ethnic diversity across regions

200

Explain how shared ethnicity can strengthen devolutionary movements.

  • shared identity builds solidarity; shared language improves organizing; collective action/mobilization; historical homeland claims; cultural pride → support for autonomy/independence.

200

Explain how communication technology helps devolutionary groups organize.

  • Acceptable answers: rapid coordination; planning protests; mass mobilization; sharing meeting locations/times; bypassing state media; creating networks across regions/diasporas.

200

Explain how internet shutdowns limit protest movements.

Acceptable answers: disrupt coordination; limit information sharing; reduce turnout; isolate activists; prevent documentation of abuses; weaken fundraising/support.

200

Describe one centripetal force governments use to promote the state as a nation.

Acceptable answers: nationalism; shared language policies; national education; symbols/holidays; common legal system; infrastructure connecting regions; conscription.

200

Explain one benefit of creating autonomous regions in a multinational state.

Acceptable answers: reduces conflict; gives cultural protection; increases representation; local control over policies; satisfies autonomy demands without full independence.

300

Explain why multinational states are more likely to experience devolution than nation-states.

  • Ethnic groups seek autonomy

  • Cultural marginalization by central government

  • Uneven political representation

  • Desire for self-determination

  • Historical grievances

300

Explain how ethnic differences can lead to demands for regional autonomy.

  • Acceptable answers: preserve language/religion; prevent assimilation; gain political voice; protect cultural institutions; respond to marginalization; address ethnic-region inequality.

300

Explain how communication technology spreads democratic ideas.

Acceptable answers: shares democratic norms; exposes corruption/abuses; increases political participation; spreads protest tactics; amplifies international attention/support.

300

Explain why controlling media can strengthen a central government.

Acceptable answers: controls narrative; reduces opposition visibility; discourages dissent; increases legitimacy; shapes national identity messaging.

300

Explain how national education can act as a centripetal force.

Acceptable answers: teaches shared history/values; builds national identity; promotes a common language; increases loyalty to the state; reduces regional differences.

300

Explain one risk of maintaining a strictly unitary state in a multinational country.

Acceptable answers: increases resentment; fuels separatism; sparks protest/violence; ignores regional needs; encourages devolution/independence movements.

400

Provide a real-world example of a multinational state experiencing devolutionary pressure.

  • Spain (Catalonia, Basque region)

  • United Kingdom (Scotland, Wales)

  • Iraq (Kurds)

  • China (Tibet, Xinjiang)

  • Canada (Quebec)

400

Using a specific example, explain how ethnicity has led to devolution.

  • Catalonia (Spain): distinct language and culture

  • Scotland (UK): national identity and historic independence

  • Kurds (Iraq/Turkey): shared ethnicity across borders

  • Tibetans (China): cultural and religious distinctiveness

  • Quebec (Canada): French language and identity

400

Explain why governments often view communication technology as a threat.

Acceptable answers: weakens censorship; enables opposition coordination; challenges official narratives; spreads dissent quickly; encourages international scrutiny.

400

Explain one way surveillance can weaken devolutionary or democracy groups.

Acceptable answers: identifies leaders; intimidates supporters; enables arrests; breaks networks; discourages organizing due to fear.

400

Explain how uneven development within a state can act as a centrifugal force.

Acceptable answers: neglected regions resent the core; wealth gaps create grievances; resource extraction without local benefit; unequal services/jobs; regional identity strengthens.

400

Compare how autonomy and a unitary state address devolution pressures differently.

Acceptable answers: autonomy decentralizes power/power-sharing; unitary centralizes authority; autonomy accommodates identity; unitary emphasizes national unity/control.

500

Explain how multinational states challenge the idea that state borders always match cultural boundaries.

  • Borders drawn politically, not culturally

  • Colonial boundaries ignored ethnic groups

  • Cultural groups often span multiple states

  • States include multiple national identities

500

Explain why ethnicity can be both a unifying force within a group and a centrifugal force within a state.

  •  unites the ethnic group internally while weakening loyalty to the state; increases in-group solidarity/out-group tension; mobilizes separatism; identity competes with national identity.

500

Give a real-world example of technology advancing a democracy or devolutionary movement.

Acceptable examples: Arab Spring social media; Hong Kong protests; Iran protests; Belarus protests; Myanmar resistance; Ukraine protest movements (any one with a tech connection).

500

Evaluate one downside for governments that heavily restrict communication infrastructure.

Acceptable answers: economic harm; global condemnation/sanctions; loss of public trust; stronger backlash/radicalization; long-term instability; reduced innovation/investment.

500

Link uneven development to devolutionary pressure in a multinational state

Acceptable answers: wealthier regions seek control over taxes/resources; poorer regions demand fairness/autonomy; ethnic regions feel exploited/ignored; inequality increases separatist support.

500

For a multinational state facing devolution, compare the choice to create an autonomous region vs. maintain a unitary state (include one pro and one con for each).

Acceptable answers (any valid compare):

  • Autonomy pro: reduces conflict/recognizes identity; con: may encourage more separatism/weakens central control.

  • Unitary pro: strengthens state unity/control; con: can intensify resistance/instability if groups feel oppressed.