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PSCI 2223 Review Exam Questions With Correct Answers. The two founding fathers of Classical Realism and the one founding father of Neorealism. - answerThucydides, Hobbes, and Waltz The principle motivator for actors within Classical Realism - answerPower Realists have this view on alliances: -...

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  • August 29, 2024
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©THEBRIGHT EXAM STUDY SOLUTIONS 8/22/2024 12:54 PM


PSCI 2223 Review Exam Questions With
Correct Answers.


The two founding fathers of Classical Realism and the one founding father of Neorealism. -
answer✔✔Thucydides, Hobbes, and Waltz

The principle motivator for actors within Classical Realism - answer✔✔Power

Realists have this view on alliances: - answer✔✔Unreliable by nature

The end goal for neorealists versus the end goal for classical realists. - answer✔✔Security and
power

According to realists, states act like this: - answer✔✔Humans

This is the view of human nature according to Liberals: - answer✔✔Selfish for our own
preferences

The P word for Liberals - answer✔✔Preferences

The way Liberals can tell if they should be happy or not. - answer✔✔Absolute gains

According to Liberalism, international politics is a result of what? - answer✔✔Domestic
preferences

The way that liberals are able to overcome the anarchy assumption in IR: - answer✔✔Reputation

The two types of actors within International Relations - answer✔✔States and Non-States

List four types of NSAs - answer✔✔NGOs, INGOs, MNCs, Domestic Actors

The defining characteristic of an IGO vs. an INGO/NGO - answer✔✔Members (IGOs = States,
(I)NGO's = non-states)
The number of domestic actors that can influence international politics according to liberals. -
answer✔✔Limitless
One of the most important and defining characteristics of the modern state. -
answer✔✔Sovereignty

, ©THEBRIGHT EXAM STUDY SOLUTIONS 8/22/2024 12:54 PM

The three levels of analysis used in this class. - answer✔✔Individual, state, and systemic
This broad term is used to describe the various types of global systems we've historically seen. -
answer✔✔Polarity (Unipolar, bipolar, multipolar)

This is how each of the schools of thought view international institutions - answer✔✔Realism:
Institutions are irrelevant
Liberalism: Institutions are everything
Radicalism: Institutions are exploitative
The theory behind states changing their alliance structures in order to equal a rising threat. -
answer✔✔Balance of power

The one thing almost every theory agrees on to a certain extent. - answer✔✔The fact that we live
in a world of anarchy
The methodological and systematic approach to problem solving used within political science. -
answer✔✔Scientific method
This school of thought within International Relations emphasizes norms and values over
institutions or power. - answer✔✔Constructivism

The two types of pressures on state decision making: - answer✔✔Internal and external

This provides the foundation of the modern nation-state. - answer✔✔The Treaty of Westphalia

The three types of war we have studied in this class. - answer✔✔Interstate, extrastate, and
intrastate

The four classifications of death that occur during a war. - answer✔✔1) Combat deaths
2) One-sided violence
3) Criminal and Unorganized violence
4) Non-violent mortality
The primary historical reason that a majority of interstate wars were fought. -
answer✔✔Territory
This systemic level explanation for war argues that unipolar systems are the most stable and
conflict only happens when the hegemon is in decline. - answer✔✔Power transition theory

The primary difference between jus ad bellum and jus in bello. - answer✔✔"justice of war"
versus "justice in war"

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