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What is a political system?
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All Flashcards in Topic 1.2
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1.2.111 cards
What is a political system?
The way a country organises power and makes decisions.
What is a democracy?
A system where the people freely choose those in power, power is checked, and the people can remove them.
What is authoritarianism?
A system where power is held by a few, with no real checks and elections absent or fake.
What is a hybrid regime?
A system that holds elections but is not truly free or fair — part democratic, part authoritarian.
What is the key marker of a democracy?
Whether the rulers are freely chosen and checked — and whether the people can remove them.
What is a unitary state?
One where power is held mainly by the central government.
What is a federal state?
One where power is shared between the central government and regional governments.
What is democratic backsliding?
The slow weakening of democracy from within — courts packed, media muzzled, elections tilted — while votes still happen.
Why does backsliding matter globally?
It shifts a state from the democratic camp toward the authoritarian one, changing how it behaves and who it allies with.
Does a state's system shape its global behaviour?
It matters for rights, openness and alliances — but states still act on their interests whatever their system.
Democracy vs authoritarianism in one line?
Democracy = power freely chosen and checked; authoritarianism = power concentrated and unchecked.
1.2.211 cards
What is a political structure?
The framework through which power is organised and exercised — above all, the structure of the international system.
What does 'anarchy' mean in global politics?
The absence of any world government above states, so each looks out for itself — not chaos.
What is polarity?
How power is spread among the great powers: unipolar (one), bipolar (two) or multipolar (several).
What is a unipolar world?
One with a single dominant power.
What is a bipolar world?
One with two rival powers, as in the Cold War.
What is a multipolar world?
One with several great powers sharing influence.
What is a balance of power?
When states form alliances so that no single power can dominate the rest.
How has the world's polarity changed recently?
From a brief post-Cold-War unipolar US moment toward a more multipolar world, with the rise of China and others.
Why does structure shape state behaviour?
With no world government (anarchy), states fend for themselves, and polarity sets how great powers balance each other.
Does structure explain everything?
It shapes rivalry and security strongly, but institutions, cooperation and ideas also shape what states do.
Which lens stresses structure?
Realism — anarchy and polarity drive competition; liberals stress institutions, constructivists stress ideas.
1.2.311 cards
What are political dynamics?
The way relationships between actors change and interact over time — moving along the cooperation–competition–conflict spectrum.
What is cooperation?
When actors work together toward a shared goal, e.g. through trade deals, alliances or treaties.
What is competition?
When actors are rivals chasing the same goals but are not fighting — a peaceful rivalry.
What is conflict?
Open hostility between actors, which can rise to war.
Why do relationships 'move both ways'?
They can slide from cooperation into competition, or from conflict back toward peace, as interests and leaders change.
What is strategic competition?
A rivalry between great powers over power and influence, short of war — e.g. US–China today.
Why is US–China a good example?
It moved from decades of trade cooperation toward strategic competition — a relationship in motion.
What is interdependence's effect on conflict?
Because actors rely on each other, interdependence raises the cost of war and can encourage cooperation.
What is a zero-sum view?
The idea that one actor's gain is another's loss — a hallmark of the 'conflict is the norm' view.
Conflict or cooperation — which is the norm?
Realists expect competition and conflict under anarchy; liberals expect cooperation to grow through trade and institutions.
What is the key skill with dynamics?
Tracking the direction of travel — which way a relationship is moving — not just describing a snapshot.
1.2.411 cards
What is a legal framework in global politics?
The body of rules — international law — that governs relations between states.
What is international law?
The rules that govern how states behave toward each other, built from treaties, custom and the UN Charter.
What are the sources of international law?
Treaties (agreements states sign), customary law (long-standing practice) and the UN Charter.
What is a treaty?
A formal, binding agreement that states sign, such as the Paris Agreement.
What is customary international law?
Rules that come from long-standing, widely accepted state practice.
What is the enforcement gap?
There is no world police to make states obey — they comply mostly by choice, for reputation and interest.
What is the ICC?
The International Criminal Court, which tries individuals for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Why is the ICC a good example?
It can try leaders for the worst crimes, but has no police of its own and several powerful states are not members.
What is the ICJ?
The International Court of Justice, which settles legal disputes between states.
Why do states follow international law without a world police?
For their reputation, their interests, and to keep the whole system of rules working.
Is international law 'real law'?
It is real and shapes behaviour on routine matters, but is weak against powerful states that choose to defy it.
1.2.511 cards
What is a political norm?
A shared standard of what counts as acceptable behaviour — an unwritten rule most actors follow because it is expected.
How is a norm different from a law?
A law is written and (in theory) enforced; a norm is an unwritten shared expectation, enforced by reputation and shame.
How does a norm gain its power?
As more actors adopt it, it spreads until it is simply taken for granted — 'just how things are done'.
What is the non-intervention norm?
The shared expectation that states should not interfere in each other's internal affairs.
What is a taboo?
A norm so strong that breaking it is seen as deeply unacceptable — e.g. using chemical weapons.
What is diplomatic immunity?
The norm that diplomats are protected and not arrested in the country they are posted to.
Why is the chemical-weapons taboo a good example?
Using them triggers global outrage and pressure, showing a norm's power — but some states have broken it, showing its fragility.
How do norms enforce themselves?
Through reputation and shame — breaking one openly makes an act seem illegitimate.
Are norms powerful or weak?
Both: they shape behaviour and define legitimacy, but the powerful can break them and norms can erode.
Which theory stresses norms?
Constructivism — shared beliefs and norms shape what states think is appropriate.
What does it mean for a norm to 'erode'?
It weakens as enough actors break it, until it no longer shapes what is seen as acceptable.
1.2.611 cards
What is a political institution?
An established, rule-based body through which politics operates — one that outlasts individual leaders.
How is an institution more than an IGO?
An IGO is one kind of institution; 'institution' is broader — any established set of rules and bodies, from a constitution to a trade system.
What do institutions provide?
Rules, continuity, a place to cooperate, and limits on power (checks and balances).
Give examples of domestic institutions.
A parliament, the courts, a central bank and the civil service.
Give examples of international institutions.
The UN, the EU and the WTO.
What is a central bank?
The institution that runs a country's money and interest rates.
Why is the EU a good example?
It binds members with shared rules, a market and a court, locking in cooperation but also limiting their sovereignty.
Why do institutions matter (liberal view)?
They lock in cooperation, reduce uncertainty, provide continuity and constrain even powerful actors.
What is the realist view of institutions?
They mainly reflect the power of strong states and are only as strong as the powers behind them.
Why do institutions give continuity?
They outlast the leaders who pass through them, so politics keeps running as leaders change.
What is liberal institutionalism?
The view that institutions shape behaviour and help states cooperate, not just reflect power.
Topic 1.2 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Systems and interactions
Global Politics exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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