Instead of viewing Islam as the primary obstacle to _____________, many citizens in the Middle East perceive U.S. policies that support _____________ regimes as the most serious impediment to democracy

A) authoritarianism; democratic
B) idealism; liberal
C) democratization; authoritarian
D) globalization; democratic


C

Political Science

You might also like to view...

Members of Congress directly serve their constituents in all of the following ways, EXCEPT ________

A) ?providing information about federal programs. B) ?reflecting their opinions when voting on legislation. C) ?visiting with a community group to educate its members about the political system. D) performing ??casework. E) ?lobbying.

Political Science

______________ are considered social contract thinkers

a. Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle b. Thomas Hobbes and Niccolo Machiavelli c. John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, and Jean Jacques Rousseau d. Plato and Aristotle e. Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Karl Marx

Political Science

Based on this chard which of the following explains why some states support the three-friths Compromise

a. Virginia and south Carolina had the highest slave populations and could add three-fiths of each slave to their populations for representation b. only six states have slave populations of more than thirty percent to add three-fiths of each slave to their population for representation c. fewer than fifty percent of the States had a significant slave population to take advantages of the three-fith compromise d. new Hampshire and north Carolina had insignificant slave populations and the three-frith Compromise was of no advantage

Political Science

According to political scientists Lee Bernick and Charles Wiggins, which of the following should a legislator not do, according to the informal rules of state legislatures?

A. be vocal about representing a specific interest group B. take an early position on whether or not a bill should pass C. limit the number of bills he or she introduces D. allow the real purpose of a bill to be known too early

Political Science