The traditional gender gap ________

A. persists more strongly in developed economies.
B. predicts that women are likely to vote for liberal political leaders
C. arises from women's different labor force participation when compared to men
D. reflects the impact of greater secularization and modernization
E. manifests itself most evidently in the politics and culture of the United States in the 1960s


C

Political Science

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The modern theory of organization, which contrasts sharply with Weber’s view of a self-contained bureaucratic structure, is

a. organizational development. b. game theory. c. cybernetics. d. open-systems theory.

Political Science

What did political scientist Larry Bartels demonstrate in his book Unequal Democracy?

A. Incumbents hold so much power in the United States and are so difficult to unseat that they have disenfranchised much of the voting population of the U.S. B. Elected officials do not tend to respond to the efforts of social movements or protests when casting votes or forming policy. C. Elected officials are substantially more responsive to the efforts of lobbyists than to the concerns of their constituents. D. Elected officials are substantially more responsive to the concerns of their more affluent constituents than to those of their poorer constituents. E. Elected officials tend to ignore the interests of their constituents when they make policy or cast votes, until just before they are up for reelection.

Political Science

The Presidentialist view is that the President has power and right in policy creation whereas the __________ view is that the President has no power in policy creation.

A. Congressionalist B. Democratic C. Constitutionalist D. Federalist

Political Science

When did women's right to vote become constitutionally guaranteed in the United States?

a. 1900 b. 1920 b. 1941 d. 1954

Political Science