Nuclear Weapons
What is hard power?
Source of law that comes from God.
What is Divine Law?
An international organization that came about after WWI that sought to prevent more world wars from happening again.
What is the League of Nations?
The two rivers in Mesopotamia that are said to be the source of life in the area.
What are the Tigris and Eurphrates rivers?
A theory that isn't fake.
What is realism?
Alliance Francaise
What is soft power?
A type of law between two or more states that require ratification by their respective legislatures.
What are treaties?
The UN Convention that is probably responsible for the mess in the South China Sea.
What is UNCLOS?
The famous phrase that originally came from the Code of Hammurabi.
What is "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth"?
A theory that's like a bird.
What is liberalism?
Carrot and Stick
What is smart power?
Diplomatic immunity is a type of this kind of international law.
What are norms?
The ski resort where the GATT, IMF and WB were founded.
What is Bretton Woods?
An ancient doctrine that legitimizes the rule of ancient Chinese emperors.
What is the Mandate of Heaven?
A theory concerned with seizing the means of production.
What is Marxism/Marxist Theory?
TikTok and Biden
What is sharp power?
Legal maxim in Latin for "promises must be kept".
What is "pacta sunt servanda"?
An ambitious global infrastructure project by China that seeks to help other countries ramp up their capabilities.
What is "One Belt, One Road"?
Time of around 100 years in China's history that is characterized by continuous invasion and colonization by foreign powers.
What is the "century of humiliation"?
The collective term of theories that are concerned with reacting towards dominant theories.
What are Critical Theories?
Zordon
What are Power Rangers?
Legal maxim in Latin where parties to a contract can withdraw at anytime due to a change in circumstances.
What is "rebus sic stantibus"?
The year when both China joined the WTO and when the Beijing Olympics were held.
When is 2008?
Policy in Tokugawa-era Japan where borders were closed for around 300 years.
What is "sakoku"?
The term that describes theories not learned by reading books and treatises, but rather by lived experiences.
What is praxis?