by ameen b
Post on 22-Feb-2016
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Slide 1
TKiller Terms
$100$100$100$100$100$200$200$200$200$200$300$300$300$300$300$400$400$400$400$400$500$500$500$500$500Killer TermsKiller Terms 2The DifferencePolitical InstitutionsPolitical Institutions 2
TPolitical Efficacy
TMore Killer Terms
TThe Difference
TPolitical Institutions
TMore Political Institutions
TRational-legal Authority
TPluralism
TDifference: Code Law and Common Law
TWhich of the AP6 directly elect both a president and representatives to a legislative body?
TWhich of the AP6 have a federalist political system?
TCentripetal and Centrifugal Forces
TParastatals
TDaily Double!
TWhich of the AP6 combines a plurality (first-past-the-post) electoral system with proportional representation?
TWhich of the AP6 use a plurality system only for electing representatives to the national legislature?
TA democratic deficit occurs when ostensibly democratic organizations or institutions in fact fall short of fulfilling what are believed to be the principles of democracy
Scoreboard
TPost Materialist Values
TDifference: Coinciding and Cross-Cutting Cleavages
TWhich of the following countries bases its legal and justice system on common law?UK, Russia, and China
TThe legitimacy of the most recent national elections has been seriously challenged in which of the AP6?
TDemocratic Deficit
TBonyads
TDifference: Consensual & Conflictual Political Culture
TWhich of the following countries formally divides its executive into two positions: the head of government and the head of state?UK, Russia, and China
TWhich of the AP6 have bicameral legislatures?
TFinal Jeopardy
TCorrelation: An apparent association between variables
Causation: A correlation in which a change in one variable results in a change in othersScoreboard
TCode Lawno tradition of judicial review or consistent application of the law. letter of the law is what matters. great in theory. no interpretation of judgefollow the code (the law)Most developing countries have this system
Common Lawone application determines the next application of the lawPrecedence
Scoreboard
TDifference: Coup d'tat and Revolution
TCoup d'tat: A forceful replacement of a regime or a government by a small elite group or groupsRevolution: A process by which a political regime is overthrown and replaced because of a broad popular support and participation in the process
Scoreboard
TFactors that separate groups within a societyMay be cultural, historic, geographic, economic, ethnic, racial, etc.The wider and deeper the cleavages, the less unified the societyCleavages which coincide with one another can reinforce each other: Religion and EthnicityCleavages that are cross-cutting weaken divisions between groups: Race and Labor
Scoreboard
TConsensual: accepts both the legitimacy of the regime and the solutions to major problemsConflictual: sharply divided, often on both legitimacy of the regime and the solutions to the major problems.Scoreboard
TRussia, China, Mexico, NigeriaScoreboard
TRussia, Nigeria, Iran, and MexicoScoreboard
TMexico(Russia stopped in 2007)Scoreboard
TUKScoreboard
TUK, Russia, and ChinaScoreboard
TRussia, Mexico, China, Nigeria, IranScoreboard
TRussia, Mexico, NigeriaScoreboard
TUK, Iran, NigeriaScoreboard
TMexico, Iran, and NigeriaScoreboard
TMexico, Russia, Nigeria, UK
TWhich of the following countries has a history of corporatism?UKRussiaChinaMexico
TUnited Kingdom & MexicoScoreboard
TName the current Presidents and Prime Ministers of all of the AP6. Answers must include title.
TMexico: Felipe Caldern (President)UK: David Cameron (PM)Nigeria: Goodluck Jonathan (President) Russia: Vladimir Putin (PM) & Dmitry Medvedev (Pr)China: Hu Jintao (President)Iran: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (President)
TScoreboard
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