Chapter 1 and 2 Vocabulary (Dr. McBurney List) Flashcards
Empirical Data
Information gathered from observation or experimentation.
Qualitative Data
Information that is difficult to measure and might be found in speeches, foundational documents, political cartoons, maps or political commentaries. Opposite of quantitative data which includes statistical data and mathematical models.
Causation
Cause and effect- when a change in one variable causes a change in another. Causation can be difficult to determine in comparative politics because of the numerous variables that can be impossible to isolate.
Correlation
An apparent relationship between two or more variables.
Human Development Index (HDI)
Statistical Index produced by the United Nations for every country of the world that seeks to measure health (life expectancy), literacy (average years of schooling), and income. Normally there is a high correlation between HDI and GDP.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
Market value of all goods and services produced by one country in one year.
GDP Per Capita
Size of national economy based on population.
Gini Index
A mathematical coefficient to measure income inequality in a given country. The Gini Index was first developed by Italian statistician Corrado Gini in 1912. Complete equality is close to zero.
Freedom House
A US Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) funded by the US government that ranks countries around the would based on level of political rights and amount of civil liberties (most free = score of 100).
Governmental Transparency
Ability (or lack thereof) of citizens to access information about a government’s policy making and policy implementation as a means to hold government officials accountable. (Most transparent is UK, least transparent incl. Iran, Russia, and China).
Fragile States Index (formerly known as Failed States Index)
Produced by the Fund for Peace, this index ranks countries based on their potential to weaken due to a range of factors including political, social, and economic turmoil.
GDP Growth Rate
Rate at which a national economy grows (or declines).
Political Systems
The laws, ideas, and procedures that address who should have authority to govern and what the government’s influence on its people should be.
States
A set of political institutions that generate and execute policy over a permanent population; an organization that maintains a monopoly of force over a given territory.
Regimes
The fundamental rules and norms of politics that control access to and the exercise of political power. Regimes endure whereas governments are subject to elections and coups.
Government
A set of institutions or individuals legally empowered to make binding decisions for a state; also, the leadership of elite in charge of running the state.
Sovereignty
The ability of a state to exercise control over actions and policy within a defined territory independent of external actors or domestic rivals.