New Study Guide Summative Flashcards
Gini Index-
The distribution of income across a population, essentially measures ‘inequality’
Human Development Index (HDI)-
Measures the quality of life (assesses health, education, and wealth of population). AKA: “Standard of living”
Gross Domestic Production (GDP)-
Most used measure for the size of an economy.
Identify the four major political attitudes-
Radical, liberal, conservative, and reactionary
What is the political attitudes’ relationship to the degree and speed of change?
- Radical- Forward degree and speed of change
- Liberal- Forward degree and speed of change
- Conservative- Backward degree and speed of change
- Reactionary- Backward degree and speed of change
How are the political attitudes similar?-
Radicals and reactionaries both see the system as broken and cannot be fixed. They both are also willing to use violence to achieve their goals. Liberals and conservatives are similar because they both fall in the middle of the political attitude spectrum so they could potentially have similar views on different issues.
How are the political attitudes different?
Radicals and reactionaries are different because radicals are far left, and reactionaries are far right. Reactionaries want to reverse change while radicals want something completely new and complete change. Liberals and conservatives (and the general left and right), have many differences on issues such as immigration (liberals are pro and conservatives are against illegal immigration), abortion, gay rights, and guns.
Identify the six major Political Ideologies
- Liberalism
- Communism
- Social Democracy (Socialism)
- Facism
- Anarchism
- Populism
What do the political attitudes advocate for?
Liberalism advocates for individual, political, and economic freedom. Communism believes the nation should be controlling the economy for economic equality. Market forces eliminated and state control production and distribution. Social democracy wants to blend communism and liberalism. Supports economic equality and private property and market forces. Facism wants the nation to be like an instrument and a whole society (so individualism is rejected).
How do they feel about capacity and autonomy and why?
Liberalism low capacity and autonomy so the state can be checked by the public if it breaches individual rights. Communism favors strong capacity and autonomy because they want control of the nation for economic equality. Socialism wants a strong capacity and autonomy for economic stability. Facism wants a strong capacity and autonomy for a strong state. Anarchism does not want capacity and autonomy since they do not want a government.
How do they feel about strong or weak state and why?
- Liberalism wants a weak state so it can be checked by the public if it breaches individual rights
- Communism wants a strong state to be in control of its economy.
- Socialism wants a strong state to regulate the economy and provide benefits to the public.
- Facism wants a strong state to control its citizens and prevent them from doing anything out of line
- Anarchism wants to eliminate the state since they believe it’s the only way to freedom and equality.
What are their strengths?
Liberalism- The greatest amount of prosperity for the majority and the public is free to do as they wish. Communism- ensures economic equality. Socialism- People get both freedom and economic stability. Facism- Economic stability. Anarchism- People can self-rule and decide what’s best for themselves. Populism- Supports the interests and rights of the common people over the elites
What are their weaknesses?
Liberalism- economic inequality. Communism- Freedom is restricted. Socialism- Fascism- People suffer due to the grouping of inferior and superior and freedom levels are low. Anarchism- People can make bad decisions since it’s self-rule and bring the nation down. Populism- Leaders are often dishonest, use inflammatory language, might manufacture crises to justify the call of a revolt, and they claim that any opposition to them is an attack on the people.
How do they distribute power?
The unitary government is a government system with a single power that is known as the central government which controls the whole state. The federal government is a government system where power is shared between the central government and regional bodies.
What are the strengths of each?
Unitary government-
* Rules and regulations in the nation remain consistent and equal.
* Less expensive compared to the federal government
* More efficient because fewer people are making the decisions
* More timely decisions in a time of emergency
Federal government-
* There is more people and more input from them so there is more experimentation and innovation
* There is a check on the growth of the central government’s power
* Locals tend to understand local problems more