Which of the following policy statements expanded U.S. involvement in the Western Hemisphere through the commitment to "exercise an international police power" in cases of chronic wrongdoing?
a. Monroe Doctrine (1823)
b. Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine (1904)
c. Clayton-Bulwer Treaty (1850)
d. Wilson's Fourteen Points (1918)
e. Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)
B
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Critics of affirmative action policy cite the following argument
A. that there's not a perfect correlation between race and other attributes, such as socioeconomic status and the ability to compete B. only requires applicants be members of the designated group C. forces organizations and institutions to accept unqualified applicants D. that the persisting marginal socioeconomic state of the underclass is more a function of their own behavior rather than past social oppression
How did the Versailles treaty contribute to WWII?
a. It convinced the Western powers that war had been made essentially illegal and would not again plague the continent. b. The treaty created the League of Nations, which Germany was able to manipulate against its enemies. c. Its harshness stirred up German nationalism, but it left the Germans the capability to eventually retaliate. d. It provided for massive economic assistance to rebuild Germany, which gave it the capacity to rise up and renew aggression. e. It placed as much blame for WWII on Britain and France as on Germany, which made those countries reluctant to repeat the same mistakes when Germany began to show aggression again.
Choosing a random sample is not a necessary or important part of polling
Indicate whether the statement is true or false
Karl Polanyi argued in his classic study The Great Transformation that dramatic political and social changes of the nineteenth century were sparked by __________
a. economic globalization, or the era’s Industrial Revolution specifically b. social and economic globalization, or the ease with which new ideologies spread as a result of market forces c. economic and military globalization, given how industrial development quickly made war more dangerous and costly d. the rise of free-market ideology, in addition to the spread of liberal ideology and nationalism