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Final Exam
Chp 12-16
107
International Studies
Undergraduate 1
12/08/2007

Additional International Studies Flashcards

 


 

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Term
POWER
Definition
Term referring to the ability to achieve what one seeks to achieve
Term
Coersion
Definition
The power/ability to encourage another to undertake or not undertake an action through "force or threat"
Term
Deterrence
Definition
The power/ability to "prevent/discourage" another from undertaking an action they might otherwise prefer to undertake

Emphasis is on “prevent/discourage”
Term
Persuasion
Definition
The power/ability to "intentionally encourage" another to undertake or not undertake an action
Term
Influence
Definition
The power/ability to produce an effect "without the apparent exertion of force or direct exercise of threat or command"

Or

The power/ability to encourage another to undertake action or not to act in a given situation
Term
Ray Cline's Perceptual Power Formula
Definition
PP = (C+E+M) X (S+W)

PP = Perceived Power
C = Critical mass – pop(#, education, etc & territory
E = Economic capability (resources, etc)
M = Military capability
S = Strategic Purpose
W = Will to pursue national strategy
Term
Dynamic Power
Definition
Power is ever changing and never constant. Economies go through cycles. Diplomacy may fail. Changes in political office occur constantly.
Term
Relational Power
Definition
Power defines relations between and among states. Powerful state> less powerful state> weak state.

The powerful state does not always influence the weaker or less powerful state
Term
Contextual Power
Definition
"Right kind" of power must be used in the "right kind" of situation. The intensity or type of conflict determines the appropriate type of power to use.
Term
Elements of Power
Definition
Population
Geography
Natural Resources
Industrial Capabilities
Military Capabilities
Will
Leadership
Diplomacy
Internal Organization
Strategy
Term
Economic Strength as an End and Means
Definition
End:
Countries that have it can
Purchase goods + services
Produce or purchase material needs
Improve one’s quality of life
Provide for one’s own security
Etc

Means:
Helps countries influence and sometimes even control the decisions of others
Directly – Sanctions, promises of trade, aid
Indirectly –others may pay deference
Along w/ other elements of power, Econ strength determines the extent to which a nation can control its own future
Term
Reemergence of Economics
Definition
1. Decline in US economic domination
2. Increase in economic prosperity of other nations
3. Rise of OPEC
4. Collapse of the Soviet Union
Term
Comparative Advantage
Definition
Country A employs means of production to produce products it produces most efficiently, trading it for what it needs from Country B which should be producing what it produces most efficiently
Term
Comparative Advantage Criticisms
Definition
-supply and demand must exist
-reasonable transaction and transportation costs
-ideally, free trade must exist
Term
Floating Exchange Rates
Definition
governments allow the market forces of supply and demand to determine the relative price of national currencies
Term
Fixed Exchange Rates
Definition
two or more governments agree to set the price of their currencies in relation to each other
Term
Liberal Trade School
Definition
Believe trade leads to specialization, which under the theory of comparative advantage improves a state's economic position
Term
Marxist Trade School
Definition
Imperialist/Capitalist nations have a stranglehold over economic trade and therefore continue to become wealthier while the developing world becomes poorer
Term
Structuralist Trade School
Definition
International trade exploits the South's backwardness and their dependence on the West. In the best of both worlds, the poor get richer, but at a slower pace than the rich are
Term
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development or the World Bank
Definition
-created in 1944 at the Bretton Woods Conference
-provides long term loans to Developing World States
Term
The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
Definition
-supports international monetary stability and establishes a stable exchange rates among nations
Term
Bretton Woods Conference
Definition
-Established fixed exchange rates
-Established IMF and IBRD
-Fails very quickly
Term
Smithsonian Agreements
Definition
• 1971 Smithsonian Agreement to allow currencies to float w/in band
• 1972 European Joint Float established
• 1973 Free Floating System agreed upon

Ended fixed rate exchange system
Term
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Definition
Estab in 1947 to lower trade barriers
8 “Rounds” of discussions
Last = Uruguay Round, 1987-93
Created WTO to supercede GATT
Went long way toward creating open/free trade system
Pledged to reduce tariffs by estimated $750B by 2003

Helped to create an "open international economic system"
Term
World Trade Organization (WTO)
Definition
-superseded GATT to oversee and implement the reductions in tariff and other nontariff barriers that it negotiated
Term
Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation Agreement (APEC)
Definition
dismantle barriers to international trade between member states by 2010
Term
Free Trade Area of the Americas Agreement (FTAA)
Definition
Proposal of putting into operation in 2010 a free trade zone throughout the Western Hemisphere (with Cuba excluded)
Term
Military Power
Definition
type of power that refers to the capacity to kill, maim, coerce, and destroy
Term
Aspects of Miltary Power
Definition
-Actual or Perceptual
-Dynamic
-Relational
-Contextual
Term
Military Power Uses
Definition
-Influence
-Persuasion
-Deterrence
-Coercion
-Compel
Term
The Peace Dividend
Definition
term referring to the trend toward lower defense expenditures
Term
Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT I)
Definition
Placed a cap on the quantity of Soviet and US delivery vehicles, and an accompanying protocol limited the number of antiballistic missile systems each side could deploy
Term
SALT II
Definition
agreement that effected some limitations on qualitative improvements that was never ratified by the US Senate
Term
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START I)
Definition
Treaty that limited each side to a total of no more than 1,600 ICBMs, SLBMs, and strategic bombers. Combined, these vehicles were not allowed to carry more than 6,000 "START-countable" warheads
Term
START II
Definition
reduced the total number of strategic nuclear warheads to 3,500 or less and banned multiple-warhead missiles
Term
Deterrence
Definition
the certainty that one country has sufficient military capabilities to convince another country that it would not be worth its while to attack
Term
Mutual Deterrence
Definition
both sides in a potential war must be convinced of the futility of attack initiation
Term
Mutual Assured Destruction
Definition
both sides in a potential nuclear war must be convinced even before a war begins that the other could absorb a first strike and still have enough nuclear weaponry left to destroy the initiating side as a functioning modern society
Term
Who said, "War is the continuation of politics by other means"?
Definition
Carl von Clausewitz
Term
Strategy
Definition
The integrated application of the instruments of national power (political, economic, psychological, diplomatic, military, etc.) in pursuit of national interests
Term
International Political Economics
Definition
This term includes population growth, food availability, mineral resource availability, and technical capabilities, as well as economic development and global distribution of wealth
Term
International Law
Definition
a system of agreements between international actors, usually states, that defines how relations between and among them will be conducted
Term
Hugo Grotius
Definition
laid the intellectual foundation for the rights and responsibilities of states to each other
Term
Naturalist School
Definition
argued that all law was derived from God's law and that law was therefore universal and unchangeable. St. Augustine argued that war was justifiable in self-defense or to punish evil
Term
Positivist School
Definition
rejected the divine authority as the basis for law and argued that the only law that existed was what its subjects consented to
Term
Eclectic School
Definition
posited that two levels of law existed, one that was God-given, timeless and universal, and the other that was man-made, finite, and voluntary
Term
Neorealist School
Definition
asserted that rules were irrelevant, but policy and values were important. International law was the product of the desires of the prevalent power(s).
Term
International Conventions
Definition
bilateral or multilateral treaties and agreements that specifically commit a signatory actor to a particular type of conduct or to a particular set of standards
Term
International Customs
Definition
term that refers to the general standard of behavior and action accepted by actors. (Diplomatic and Consular Immunity and Ocean and high sea laws)
Term
General Principles
Definition
Expectation of reciprocal fair treatment of foreign nationals, equal application of laws, and protection of personal property and life
Term
Subsidiary Sources
Definition
Most international tribunals accept "stare decisis," the International Court of Justice does not
Term
Constitutive Theory
Definition
theory argues that a state or new government is not a legal entity until it is recognized
Term
Declarative Theory
Definition
the key element for statehood is when a government can effectively rule its indigenous people
Term
Jus Belli (Law of War)
Definition
Concludes that if war is unavoidable, then its destructiveness and brutality should be limited as much as possible. Created laws of war... uniformed soldiers, war declaration, no harm to noncombatants, etc
Term
Bellum Justum (Just War) and Bellum Injustum
Definition
the (blurred) distinctions between just and unjust reasons to wage war
Term
Diplomacy
Definition
the implementation of an international actor's policies toward other actors, establishes a set of expectations about what an international actor will and will not do
Term
Niccolo Machiavelli
Definition
stressed that rulers should use whatever means they had at their disposal to stay in power
Term
Open Diplomacy
Definition
open international covenants, openly arrived at
Term
Multilateral Diplomacy
Definition
diplomacy in which many countries participate. Led to the development of IGOs
Term
The Purposes of Modern Diplomacy
Definition
Representation
Information Gathering
Signaling and Receiving
Negotiating
Crisis Management
Public Diplomacy
Term
Nature of Sociopolitical Parameters of Power
Definition
intangible elements such as will, morale, and character that contribute to power
Term
Sociopolitical Elements of Power
Definition
-more difficult to measure/define
-less tangible
-ephemeral
-domestic and international
Term
Will and Morale
Definition
the degree of determination that any actor has in the pursuit of its internal or external objectives
Term
Supranatural Appeal
Definition
appeal that extends beyond a single state to several states, to strengthen their international positions
Term
International Public Opinion
Definition
the attitudes of the international community toward a given issue, actor, or situation
Term
Thomas Malthus
Definition
predicted that food production will grow arithmetically, while the global population will grow exponentially leading to disease, starvation, and conflict on an unprecedented scale
Term
Countries with greater quantities of technology and more sophisticated technology tend to have...
Definition
... higher standards of living
Term
Neither War Nor Peace
Definition
everything between war and peace, without declaring war
Term
The Five Categories of International Conflict
Definition
1. International Crisis
2. Low-Intensity Warfare
3. Terrorism
4. Civil War
5. International War
Term
International Crisis
Definition
1) high priority goals of an actor must be threatened
2) a limited amount of time is available before action must be taken
3) the situation must be for the most part unanticipated
4) the situation must not escalate into armed conflict

Iranian Hostage Crisis
Term
Brinksmanship
Definition
the art of being able to move closer to the brink of war than one's potential opponent
Term
Crisis Management
Definition
the ability to manage and defuse tense international situations without going to war
Term
Low-Intensity Conflict
Definition
international violence limited in frequency or level
Term
Terrorism
Definition
violence inititiated by groups of all ideological persuasions for a variety of objectives against innocent targets
Term
Civil War and Revolution
Definition
This type of war made up over 85% of wars between 1945 and 1976
Term
International War
Definition
conflict between or among states carried out by their armed forces that is also an accepted form of conducting relations between and among states
Term
The Causes of War and International Violence
Definition
1)Human Nature
2)Human Perceptual Limitations
3)Poverty and Disparities in Wealth
4)The Internal Structure of States
5)The International System
Term
Human Nature
Definition
-St Augustine- manifestation of original sin
-Benedict de Spinoza- passion and reason were at odds
-Reinhold Niebuhr- dark, unconscious sources in the human psyche
-Confucius- deceit and cunning in man
Term
Perceptual Limitations
Definition
people have difficulty perceiving from more than one viewpoint
Term
Poverty and Disparities in Wealth
Definition
-Industrialized states with relatively high living standards are less likely to go to war
-Over 90% of casualties and conflicts of warfare since WWII have occurred in developing states
Term
Internal Structure of States
Definition
-Kant- ideal state structure was the Republic
-Wilson- Democracy
-Lenin- Communism
Term
The International System
Definition
-Might made right in this system
-The international system of states themselves causes warfare because no higher authority than the state exists
Term
Long-Cycle Theory
Definition
large scale general wars occur over more or less regular periods of time
Term
Alternate Paths to Peace
Definition
-Religion and Values
-Military Power and Deterrence
-Arms control & Disarmament
-Economic Interdependence
-International Institutions
-Democracy
-Communism
-Redistribution of Wealth/Elimination of Poverty
-International Law
-World Government
Term
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948)
Definition
this document identifies and states a common standard of human rights for all peoples and all nations
Term
Broad Human Rights
Definition
"basic human needs approach" to human rights, including availability of food, health services, educations, and a clean environment
Term
Narrow Human Rights
Definition
political and legal rights such as freedom of religion and speech, maintenance of democratic systems and practices, equality of opportunity, opposition to racial and ethnic discrimination and violence, etc...
Term
Universal Vs. Relativist Human Rights
Definition
Developing Countries argue that universal human rights are a creation of the Western world. Most of these DCs are authoritarian states, though.
Term
Bangkok Declaration
Definition
Declaration signed by 40 Asian states, declaring that core human rights such as freedom and democracy are regional.
Term
Sovereignty and Human Rights
Definition
States retain the ability to define and protect human rights as they see fit within their own borders
Term
Enforcing Human Rights Standards and Agreements
Definition
Nuremberg and Tokyo Trials created by UN after WWII to judge war crimes , but called by some, "a victor's justice."
Term
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)
Definition
intended to punish anyone who committed any crimes against humanity, but excluded the death penalty from its sentencing
Term
International Criminal Court (ICC)
Definition
This court, once in operation would have jurisdiction over crimes against humanity, war crimes, and genocide.

Entered into force Jul. 2002

China has neither signed nor ratified

US and Russia have signed, but not ratified
Term
Individualism
Definition
This value focuses on the worth of the individual and his or her rights
Term
Collectivism
Definition
This value focuses on the well-being of the collective body, such as the state, by providing for society over the individual
Term
Moralism/ Spiritualism
Definition
emphasis on spiritual values, often identified with religion and traditional societies
Term
Materialism
Definition
Value and emphasis on material goods
Term
Modernization
Definition
Value employing "progressive" change, often implying opposition to religion and other entrenched ways of organizing society
Term
Traditionalism
Definition
the desire to maintain values, customs, mores, and living patterns that have been established over time
Term
Conflict of Moral Values
Definition
disagreement over what is morally right and morally wrong
Term
Causes for Environmental Degradation
Definition
Population Growth
Increased food production
accelerated energy and non-fuel mineral use
Expansion of Industry
Motorized transportation
Term
Causes of Land Degradation
Definition
Plowing, poor farming techniques, urbanization, deforestation
Term
Causes of Deforestation
Definition
Urbanization, farming, industrial and private consumption, emphasis of development over environment, lack of interest of elites
Term
Greenhouse Effect
Definition
gas emissions that prevent heat from dissipating into atmosphere
Term
Montreal Protocol
Definition
committed industrialized states to stop producing CFCs by 1996 and gave Developing Countries another 10 years to halt production. World CFC production has decreased 75%
Term
Rio Earth Summit
Definition
-178 states in attendance
-UN Framework Convention on Climate Change
-Convention on Biological Diversity

-Declaration on Environmental and Development Issues (sustainable development)
-Non-binding pledge to protect forests and woodlands
-"Agenda 21"
Term
Kyoto Environmental Summit
Definition
Summit targeting "global warming"

-committed states to reduce green house gases by 2008-2012

-Clean Development Mechanism- States can meet their targets by using emission reductions achieved through project activities in LDCs
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