question archive Answer the following 12 True/False questions in D2L: Quizzes/Exams

Answer the following 12 True/False questions in D2L: Quizzes/Exams

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Answer the following 12 True/False questions in D2L: Quizzes/Exams. Each question 
1. "The end of history" vision is based on the liberal internationalist perspective which embraces a foreign
policy aimed at promoting democracy.
2. The concept of modernization theory, which is at the core of the "one world" vision, states that economic
development will create a middle class that will demand opportunities for democratic participation.
3. Proponents of a new medievalism insist that the creation of the world state is inevitable due to the spread of
the idea of global governance.
4. The Liberal paradigm is associated with the "war becomes unthinkable" vision which is based on the
observation that, over time, the idea of war has become less and less acceptable.
5. One of the critiques of the "engendered peace" vision is that women tend to ignore important political issues
in favor of more equality.
6. According to the "great power war" vision, the Western civilization gradually declines in power relative to
other world civilizations.
7. Rodrik and Walt argue that a more benign world order in which great powers compete in some areas and
cooperate in others and observe new and flexible rules is possible, even if the great powers make economic and
geopolitical dominance their overriding goal.
8. Rodrik and Walt propose a framework of great power actions that spells out behaviors that are prohibited,
mutually altering behavior to the benefit of all, independent behavior by a single state to fulfill national
interests, and behaviors that require multilateral involvement.
9. Rodrik and Walt conclude that the real advantages of their proposed framework are that it will impose severe
reputational costs on transgressors, and will work with a U.S.-dominated liberal order and with the imposition
of new norms of global governance from above.
10. Legvold argues that the dominant feature of international politics in the decades ahead will be two
interlocking cold wars in a new bipolar world: the new and ongoing cold war with China and the future cold
war with Russia.
11. Levgold believes that the U.S. and China see each other as major military threats, their economic
relationship is increasingly politicized, they engage in a struggle for technological supremacy driven by national
security concerns, and their geostrategic rivalry will provide the ultimate shape of the new cold war.
12. Legvold concludes that although the dangers of a deepening U.S.-Russia cold war are great, the evolution of
U.S.-Chinese relations will be the single factor determining whether a dystopian bipolar world will emerge, and
that to avoid that outcome, both countries need to recalibrate their nuclear and conventional military strategies.

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