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60 questions
United States
Canada
Mexico
Brazil
UNITED NATIONS
IGO
INTERNATIONAL LAW
NATION STATE
North Atlantic Trade Organization
North American Trade Organization
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
North Alaskan Trade Organization
NATO
COMECON
Warsaw Pact
NAFTA
cultural diversification
marginalization
assimilation
homogenization
Corporation
partnership
Multinational Company
Sole Proprietorship
Spain and Portugal
England and France
Germany and Italy
United States and Soviet Union
North and South Vietnam
East and West Asia
North and South Korea
East and West Europe
Communism
Capitalism
Merchantilism
Utopian Socialism
Nation State
International Relations
United Nations
National Interest
Democracy
Confederacy
Monarchy
Autocracy
Russia
Japan
United States
France
issues relating to your country at home
domestic affairs
foreign affairs
international relations
humanitarian action
matters having to do with international relations and with the interests of the home country in foreign countries
domestic affairs
foreign affairs
peacekeeping operations
doctrine
study of the relationship between different countries
international conflict
international relations
nongovernmental organization
doctrine
enforcing peace between countries by using an international military force
peacekeeping operations
foreign aid
summit
alliance
a meeting between the leaders of two or more countries to discuss issues of concern
terrorism
embargo
international relations
summit
the use of violence or the threat of violence to compel a group of people to behave in a certain way
summit
executive agreement
embargo
terrorism
a conflict between two or more different countries
international conflict
terrorism
embargo
economic sanctions
a political unit able to exercise effective governance and control over a well-defined piece of territory and its population.
states
positivism
rational choice theory
structural realism (neo-realism)
an approach to knowledge based on scientific method and the observation and analysis of empirical data
states
positivism
rational choice theory
structural realism (neo-realism)
an approach to social science borrowed from economics, that assumes individual are rational actors who make decisions intended to maximize their interests on the basis of cost – benefit calculations
states
positivism
rational choice theory
structural realism (neo-realism)
the absence of an effective world government capable of enforcing rules and norms of behavior
anarchy
sovereignty
rational choice theory
structural realism (neo-realism)
state objectives and needs that transcend the particular interests of individuals and groups that reside within a state and that drive state behavior in the international system
balance of power
security dilemma
national interest
prisoner's dilemma
the notion that what one state does for purely defensive purposes might appear to other states as threatening to their security and interests
balance of power
security dilemma
Liberalism
Melian Dialogue
when states act in ways that, on average, maintain a systemwide equilibrium. If this is the case,, the chances of war, though never eliminated, are minimized.
balance of power
security dilemma
Liberalism
Melian Dialogue
German philosopher who In his 1795 essay To Perpetual Peace, Kant argued that, “The state of peace among men living side by side is not the natural state (status naturalis); the natural state is one of war. This does not always mean open hostilities, but at least an unceasing threat of war.
Liberal Institutionalism
Immanuel Kant
Liberalism
Liberal Commercialism
idea that democracies tend not to fight wars against one another and that the spread of democratic government can be the antidote to war in the international system
Transnational Advocacy Networks (TANs
Constructivism
Democratic Peace Theory
Kantian Triangle
the idea that people care about their national identity and are motivated to seek national self-determination by acquiring a state of their own
Two-Level Game
Nationalism
League of Nations
Concert of Europe
approach to order in which a global coalition of states agrees to act collectively to repel aggression against any other state in the international system. Also used to apply to regional alliances such as NATO that adopt a collective security approach among their membership. (the law breaker who violates the rights of another finds the combined force of society against them)
Failure of League of Nations
Collective Security
Appeasement Policy
The Cold War
period of crisis and tension between US and the USSR that began shortly after WWII; it ended with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the disintegration of USSR in 1991
spheres of influence
bipolarity
Appeasement Policy
The Cold War
an international system in which only 2 major powers are capable of seriously threatening the security and sovereignty of one another
spheres of influence
bipolarity
Cuban Missile Crisis
Proxy Wars
organization with an international membership, scope, or presence
Complex Interdependence
International Organizations
Non-Governmental Organizations
Positivism
A way of thinking about and approaching an area of scholarly inquiry that is widely accepted (or dominant) within a particular discipline
Realism
Approach
Theory
Paradigm
having the ultimate political authority over a population and territory
Sovereignty
Rational & Unitary Actors
National Interest
Anarchy
theory that suggests that national security is enhanced when military capability is distributed so that no one state is strong enough to dominate all others.
Balance of Power
Polarity
Multipolarity
Melian Dialogue
in international politics describes a distribution of power in which more than two nation-states have nearly equal amounts of military, cultural, and economic influence.
Liberalism
Polarity
Multipolarity
Melian Dialogue
Territory with defined borders, Population, Sovereignty
Characteristics of States
City-States
Holy Roman Empire
Empires
a policy of extending a country's power and influence through diplomacy or military force
Napoleonic Wars
Imperialism
Congress of Vienna
Concert of Europe
power is distributed to one superpower
Third Wave of Democratization
G20
unipolarity (hegemony)
Globalization
the study of relationships among countries, the roles of sovereign states, inter-governmental organizations (IGO), international non-governmental organizations (INGO), non-governmental organizations (NGO), and multinational corporations (MNC).
Third Wave of Democratization
G20
unipolarity (hegemony)
Globalization
the global trend that has seen more than 60 countries throughout Europe, Latin America, Asia, and Africa undergo some form of democratic transitions since Portugal's " Carnation Revolution " in 1974.
Third Wave of Democratization
G20
unipolarity (hegemony)
Globalization
military power or aggression
Asymmetric Warfare-
hard power
soft Power
Obama Effect
other recourses that a country can use to impact other countries
Levels of Analysis
hard power
soft Power
Obama Effect
when states act in ways that, on average, maintain a systemwide equilibrium. If this is the case,, the chances of war, though never eliminated, are minimized.
Democratic Peace Theory
Constructivism
Balance of Power
Kantian Triangle
paradigm that suggests the inclusion of more women in positions of authority could change the way world politics is conducted, and traditional scholarship, especially realism, reflects a gendered perspective on the conduct of international relations.
Neo-Marxism
Holy Roman Empire
Feminism
Popular Sovereignty