What is required for a citizen to be able to easily influence the state according to the Exit, Voice, and Loyalty game examined in Chapter 3?

A. The citizen can never influence the state.
B. The citizen must have a credible exit threat (E> 0).
C. The state must depend on the citizen (L> 1).
D. Voice must not be too costly (C< 1 ? E).
E. The citizen must have a credible exit threat (E> 0), the state must be dependent (L> 1), and voice must not be too costly (C< 1 ?E).


E. The citizen must have a credible exit threat (E> 0), the state must be dependent (L> 1), and voice must not be too costly (C< 1 ?E).

Political Science

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Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his famous speech telling the world "I have a dream" during which of the following? 

A. The signing ceremony of the Civil Rights Act B. The March on Washington C. The Woolworth lunch counter sit-in D. The Montgomery bus boycott E. The March on Selma

Political Science

Answer the following statement(s) true (T) or false (F)

1.Republican presidential candidates since Richard Nixon have sought to build winning coalitions by combining affluent economic conservatives with women, minorities, and young people. 2.The 2008 presidential nomination process in both parties left no doubt that party allocation rules matter. 3.Over the past 30 years, the proportion of Americans seeing important differences in what the parties stand for has decreased from 80% to about 50%. 4.Party units, the party’s candidates, outside groups, and wealthy individuals with compatible political and ideological agendas now operate as flexible partisan networks for acquiring and allocating campaign resources.

Political Science

At the core of feudalism was what concept?

a. Kings are chosen by divine right and their rule is unquestioned. b. The lord gave his vassal a piece of property in exchange for loyalty. c. All power came from military might. d. Those who have wealth will rise above those who do not.

Political Science

Out of the five views of political power, the view that states that there is an ever-present gap between American political ideals and American political institutions in practice is known as the

a. Class View by Karl Marx b. Bureaucratic View by Max Weber c. Creedal Passions View by Samuel Huntington d. Pluralist View by David B. Truman

Political Science