In Man, the State, and War, Kenneth Waltz distinguishes what three levels of causation for war?
a. The individual, the political party, and the state
b. The political party, the state, and the international system
c. The individual, the state, and the international system
d. The military, the state, and the international system
e. The individual, the state, and the environment
Answer: c
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Edmund Burke and Adam Smith would likely agree on which of the following points?
A) Free markets are best. B) Markets require regulation. C) Positive freedom is necessary. D) A progressive tax system is needed.
Which of the following methods is used to select delegates to the national nominating conventions?
A) party caucus B) state conventions C) primaries D) all of the above E) none of the above
The introduction to Chapter 2 uses the example of scientific
forestry to make the point that: a. state efforts to plan and administer forests and society are almost always destructive. b. state efforts to plan and administer forests and society are usually productive. c. state efforts to plan and administer forests and society lead to more bureaucracy and higher inefficiency. d. state efforts to plan and administer forests and society can both develop people's capabilities or impede them, just as they can manage forests in ways that destroy their ecology or contribute to them.
A modern state’s territory ______.
A. can never change, regardless of the circumstances B. changes very often, in most cases C. can change through independence, secession, acquisition, and other means D. usually contains a number of unclaimed areas