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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Political Science
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Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
political-science
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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study here
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Number of Parties 2 - Constitutional Review: Parliamentary supremacy - Number of chambers: Unicameral/weak bicameral - Federalism: Unitary
Majoritarian
Disadvantages of Social Movements
Participation
Party System
2. Think of this as 'gender as cause'. Gender roles change and/or mix of women in politics changes; what is the consequence? Key finding: having more women in public office changes the policy agenda - i.e. - more focus on women's issues
Consolidation
Social Movements
Gender as a Category
During what century did political science emerge as a systemic study? Where?
3. Public vs. private goods - Non-exclusivity. The owner can't deny access - Inexhaustability. The good is never used up - Jointness of supply. Its existence depends on our combined contribution; truly 'collective' - Free riding. We generally fail to co
Social Movements: Causes
Political Violence
Collective action problem: causes
Observational/Evidential
4. Number of Parties 2 - Constitutional Review: Judicial Review - Number of chambers: bicameral - Federalism: Federal
Communism
Consensual
Patronage
Terrorism
5. Situation of stability - no party has incentive and ability to undermine the regime (Causes: cultural or economice - or military culture) - (Int'l Factors: U.S. foreign policy - Soviet foreign policy - Changes to Catholic doctrine - EU accession - G
During what century did political science emerge as a systemic study? Where?
Consolidation
Political Science
Economics
6. No or low citizen accountability ('subjects' rather than 'citizens') - Reciprocal relationship between leader and selectorate - Totalitarianism vs. authoritarianism
Non-democratic regimes
Democracy
Party System
Theories
7. In social movements - rational choice and culture come together - Culture: the sense of a righteous - popular will that has been subverted ('framing'/'grievance') - Motivates collective action - But also determines the choice of organization and tact
Observational Laws
Advantages of Social Movements
Social Movements: Causes
Classic Liberal Argument
8. A government with a one house legislature.
Disadvantages of Social Movements
Constructivism
Unicameral Legislature
Transition
9. Regime where the rulers are accountable to the ruled.
Party System
Democracy
Political Party
Theories
10. An organization that seeks elective office - Currency/instrument: votes
Empirical Knowledge
Consensual
Political Party
Threshold
11. A political organization that primarily uses lobbying - Currency/instrument: money - information - numbers
Socialism
State
Consensual
Interest Groups
12. Hard to amass resources (money and information) - Short-lived - The dilemma of formalization
Disadvantages of Social Movements
Contestation
Lijphart's majoritarian vs. consensual
District Magnitude
13. Utility maximization - Preferences: Comparability/Completeness - Transitivity - Probability - Incomplete information and uncertainty about future - Mathematical modeling
classic Liberalism
Collective action problem: causes
Rational Choice (Individual Level)
Totalitarianism
14. Warfare and military technology - Economic: development of trade and manufacturing and new financial/fiscal instruments - Cultural: Enlightenment - (There are also Environmental/geographic factors)
Political Science
Sovereignty
Political Factors of Strong States
Collective action problem: Solutions
15. Political parties - Interest groups - Social movements
State Strength
Political Party
Three types of Political Organization
Party System
16. Describes the principal characteristics of what has been studied.
Gender as a Category
Why States/Governments
Interest Groups
Observational/Evidential
17. Political violence by non-state actors against civilian targets
Political Identity
Types and examples of non-democratic regimes
Terrorism
Solidarity
18. monopoly over the legitimate use of force
political equality
Gender as a Category
Sovereignty
Ideology
19. Hypotheses based on what has been observed.
Observational Laws
Unicameral Legislature
Advantages of Social Movements
State
20. Ideology An ideology that seeks the active reshaping of minds of individuals and believes this can/must be done by force - Coercive mobilization - No social or political pluralism
Solidarity
Participation
Totalitarianism
Consensual
21. Monarchies - Single-party regimes - Military regimes - Oligarchies - Theocracies - Personalistic regimes
Revolution
Types and examples of non-democratic regimes
Political Factors of Strong States
Utilitarian Justification
22. A subset of culture - based on our ability to attach labels to ourselves and others - or to define ourselves in terms of the groups we belong to - Some political examples: Partisan identity - Class identity - Ethnic identity - National identity
Why States/Governments
Types and examples of non-democratic regimes
Identity
Theories
23. The identities that can become political are those formed very early in life or perhaps vaguely racial/genetic. Struggles to explain (rapid) cultural change - or which identities become politicized
Culture
Theories
Sovereignty
Primordialism
24. how many seats are allotted to each electoral district
Non-democratic regimes
Political Identity
District Magnitude
Patronage
25. Historical origins. A reaction to liberalism - Central assumption: 'The highest good of society [is] the maintenance of ordered community and of common values' (p. 28) One of the 3 big idealogies
Comparative Government
Rational Choice (Individual Level)
Revolution
Conservatism
26. The opportunity to choose among alternative candidates and positions
Rational Choice (Individual Level)
Contestation
Culture
Constructivism
27. An identity-based community - where the identity is strong enough that we think we should probably be sovereign...
Political Factors of Strong States
Gender as a Process
Nation
Sovereignty
28. Situation where all fully qualified citizens have an equal say
Authoritarianism
Participation
Empirical Knowledge
Socialism
29. The set of relationships among parties in a country - Often categorized by the effective number of parties.
Party System
Identity
Culture
Consolidation
30. Basically - synonymous for statistical method - Large numbers of observational data - 'Control' for confounding factors
Quantitative
State
Conservatism
Politics
31. The mathematical formula used to allocate the seats according to the vote - Plurality or 'first-past-the-post' - various PR formulas - such as D'Hondt - largest remainders - St. Lague - etc.
Formula for allocating seats according to vote
Political Theory
Science
Majoritarian
32. State of nature (collective action problem) - Hobbes' solution: the social contract
Collective action problem: Solutions
Why States/Governments
Fascism
Authority
33. All voluntary associations/all secondary associations
Formula for allocating seats according to vote
Political Party
Lijphart's majoritarian vs. consensual
(Civil) Society
34. Public administration (civil service). All (non-military) government workers not elected to their posts - but hired (United States beginning in 1880s)
Economics
Authoritarianism
Democracy
Bureaucracy
35. A basic plan that outlines the structure and functions of the national government. Clearly rooted in Western political thought - it sets limits on government and protects both property and individual rights.
International Relations
Constitution
Utilitarian Justification
Consolidation
36. The rules about making the rules - often embodied in a constitution.
Economics
Regime type
Identity
Formula for allocating seats according to vote
37. A consciously derived - coherent set of beliefs that offers a comprehensive political program
Terrorism
Ideology
(Civil) Society
Types and examples of non-democratic regimes
38. Historical origins. Failure of liberalism to address shortcomings of capitalist industrialization; Marx - Central assumption: All persons are of equal value - but they cannot develop themselves alone
classic Liberalism
Authority
Socialism
Gender as a Category
39. Basically - density and quality of civil society
Civic Engagement
Identity
Economics
Interest Groups
40. Comparative Politics - International Relations - American Politics - (normative) theory or Political Philosophy
Subfields of Political Science
Democracy
Collective action problem: Solutions
Interest Groups
41. A systematic study of the structures of two or more political systems (such as those of Britain and the People's Republic of China) to achieve an understanding of how different societies manage the realities of governing. Also considered are politica
Social Movements
District Magnitude
Comparative Government
Regime type
42. Think of this as gender as outcome; what factors - esp. political ones - lead to changes in gender roles? Key finding: politics does matter - especially who has an organized voice. Formal rules - number/identity of parties - etc.
Patronage
Significance of Collective action problem
Gender as a Process
Party System
43. Force + Legitimacy
Ideology
During what century did political science emerge as a systemic study? Where?
Social Movements: Causes
Authority
44. (Voluntary) allocation (production and distribution) of goods and services
Economics
Utilitarian Justification
Social Movements: Causes
Three types of Political Organization
45. Individual rationality does not always lead to collective rationality - Walking on the grass - Policy implementation is problematic - Voting; protests; interest groups; etc. are underprovided (Olson's point)
Bases of legitimacy/authority in non-democratic regimes
Social Movements
During what century did political science emerge as a systemic study? Where?
Significance of Collective action problem
46. The organized study of government and politics. It borrows from the related disciplines of history - philosophy - sociology - economics - and law.
Constitution
Revolution
Political Science
Criticisms of Rational Choice
47. Concentration vs. dispersal of power
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48. 19th - in the United States and Western Europe.
During what century did political science emerge as a systemic study? Where?
Rational Choice (Individual Level)
Political Identity
Subfields of Political Science
49. A non-meritocratic system in which jobs and contracts are distributed according to partisan support - (The U.S. 'spoils system' of the 19th century')
Gender as a Category
Patronage
Utilitarian Justification
Comparative Government
50. Utility: self-interest - but what constitutes self-interest? Material self-interest? Economics - Politics. Example: vote maximization - The gospel Failures of rationality - Really incomplete information & satisfaction - Intransitivity and other cogni
State
Criticisms of Rational Choice
Bases of legitimacy/authority in non-democratic regimes
District Magnitude