What is the difference between a possession goal and a milieu goal?
a. A possession goal is acquired and held, while a milieu goal is acquired but quickly lost.
b. A possession goal is valued for its own sake, while a milieu goal is required to achieve a further goal.
c. A possession goal is typically sought during war, while milieu goals are ones typically associated with peacetime.
d. A possession goal is specific and tangible while a milieu goal is structural and intangible.
According to Rodrik, most economists agree that free trade produces gains for states. But what do they often fail to make apparent?
a. the security costs of increased interdependence
b. the theoretical assumptions that underlie that view
c. those gains are less than those produced prior to free trade agreements
d. the uneven distribution of those gains
In trade expectations theory, Copeland fuses __________.
a. liberalism's caution regarding international trade and dependence with realism's enthusiasm for the international market
b. liberalism's understanding of the costs of war with realism's understanding of the benefits of war
c. liberalism's understanding of the benefits of trade with realism's understanding of the costs of trade being cut off
d. liberalism's fear of market regulation with realism's understanding of state interests
Which of the following is an example of the third face of power?
a. State A threatens to destroy State B's most populace cities as a nuclear deterrent.
b. State A deploys a massive, secret propaganda campaign to entice State B into an alliance.
c. State A convinces State B to open its borders to trade by blockading its ports.
d. State A cites human rights violations to rally other states to boycott State B's exports.
According to Copeland, what determines the expected value of war?
a. the power balance or imbalance between the relevant states
b. the amount of trade between the relevant states
c. the degree of interdependence between the relevant states
d. the degree of autarky of the relevant states