Future of Strategic Studies Ch.23 Test Questions & Answers - Updated Test Bank | Strategy in World 7e Baylis by John Baylis. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 23
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 01
01) Although it is an intellectual discipline, strategic studies first developed outside the university system.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 02
02) After the Second World War, strategic studies was influenced more by experts in the social sciences and humanities than by those working in the physical sciences and engineering.
a. True
b. False
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 03
03) Which of the following factors create(s) tensions between the academic and policy worlds?
a. Practitioners must study a broader array of issues than academics, and must often make decisions in a hurry.
b. Because practitioners expected to be judged by results, they tend to rely on what they have found works for them even if this amounts to intuition or a hunch. Academics tend to dismiss this approach as inappropriate or relying on overgeneralizations.
c. Practitioners are acutely aware that their decisions place the lives of service personnel and possibly whole societies at risk, while academics are not held accountable for the implications of their models.
d. All the options given are correct.
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 04
04) The focus of strategic studies on individual actors and appreciation of political choice is not problematic from a social science perspective, as both emphasize the importance of individual choices and tend to regard wider patterns of behaviour as unimportant.
a. True
b. False
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 05
05) Which of the following criticisms is (are) made of the realist tradition?
a. That it makes an exaggerated claim of objectivity, as though it is the only accurate reflection of ‘reality’
b. That it is preoccupied with armed force and understates the importance of peaceful means of dispute resolution
c. That it disregards domestic and transnational factors
d. All the options given are correct.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 06
06) Which of the following approaches emphasizes ‘the importance of the interaction between the way we describe the world and how we act within it’, with important implications for conceptions of power?
a. Realism
b. Post-Modernism
c. Neo-Realism
d. Constructivism
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 07
07) In chapter 23 of Strategy in the Contemporary World, Lawrence Freedman argues that attempts to develop what might be called a 'non-dogmatic realism' would be counterproductive. This is because power is best understood as a measurable resource and strategy is, in essence, the mechanical expenditure of resources to achieve clearly defined objectives.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 08
08) In chapter 23 of Strategy in the Contemporary World, Lawrence Freedman argues that, because of the changing role of force in the international system, violence should no longer be treated as the ultimate arbiter of political disputes. Thus, the potential for violence should not be used as a starting point in any attempt to create a general theory of strategy.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 09
09) In chapter 23 of Strategy in the Contemporary World, Lawrence Freedman argues that strategy is purely a military concern.
a. True
b. False
Type: true-false
Title: Chapter 23 - Question 10
10) War is a military-oriented formulation, whose widespread use as a metaphor is not problematic.
a. True
b. False