The five Great Powers of Europe in the nineteenth century were

a. Great Britain, France, Italy, Russia, and Prussia.
b. Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Russia.
c. Great Britain, Austria, Prussia, Russia, and France.
d. Great Britain, Austria, Prussia, Russia, and Italy.
e. Austria, Prussia, Italy, Spain, and Russia.


c

Political Science

You might also like to view...

As Madison points out in Federalist No. 10, since the states and the national government combine the citizenry's preferences into different groupings, the two levels of government do which of the following?

A. They usually adopt almost identical policies to address the same problem. B. They are always responsive to the same coalitions of people. C. They may adopt different, even opposite, policies to address the same problem. D. They operate in an unequal way; the states can leave all of the difficult decision-making about policy to the federal government.

Political Science

Which of the following was NOT a Cold war strategy used by the superpowers to gain and maintain competing spheres of influence?

a. Bush Doctrine b. Marshall Plan c. North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) d. Truman Doctrine e. Warsaw Pact

Political Science

In the context of the federal civil service, the _____ recruits, interviews, and tests potential government workers and determines who should be hired

A) Office of Special Counsel B) Department of Labor C) Office of Personnel Management D) Department of the Interior E) Department of Veterans Affairs

Political Science

A handful of states do not hold elections for individual parties to select their candidates. Instead, the party members are invited to attend local meetings at which they choose delegates who make a commitment to a candidate for the party nomination. This process is called

a. open primary. b. closed primary. c. caucus. d. referendum. e. sifting.

Political Science