What is the difference between hard and soft power?
a. Hard power is relatively more difficult to use effectively than soft power.
b. Hard power is typically used by revisionist powers while soft power is used by status quo powers.
c. Hard power aims at affecting behavior while soft power aims at affecting preferences.
d. Hard power is used during war while soft power is used during peacetime.
c
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Discuss the various steps of policymaking in the United States. Can public policy be separated from politics, or is it inherently political by definition?
What will be an ideal response?
What do critics of federalism argue?
A. The system allows too much power at the state level. B. The system allows too much power at the local level. C. There is no check on the powers of the national government. D. Americans suffer as a result of the inequalities across the states. E. Americans often are unaware of the differences that exist from one state to the next.
Describe the relationship between parties and judicial independence.
What will be an ideal response?
What were the two major obstacles African Americans faced in securing their rights?
A. The structure of government made it hard to change policy and politicians would not engage in costly behavior without an expected return. B. The constitutional guarantee of slavery and the unwillingness of politicians to take tough action. C. The unwillingness of the British government to use its emancipation powers in the states and the constitutional guarantee of slavery. D. The inability to raise the taxes necessary to compensate slave-owners and the fact that politicians would not engage in costly behavior without an expected return.