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12.0 Political Science Module 12: International Relations
See all of the sections for module 12.
11.4 Stability, Crisis, and State Failure
When institutions weaken, governments may face increasing difficulty responding to crises. In severe cases, political instability can lead to state fragility or even state failure.
11.3 Corruption, Clientelism, and Institutional Decay
Three concepts frequently discussed by political scientists are corruption, clientelism, and institutional decay. Although distinct, all three can undermine governance, reduce public trust, weaken state...
11.2 Governance: How Well Does the State Actually Rule?
A state may possess significant capacity, but how effectively does it actually use that capacity? Are institutions competent, accountable, fair, and responsive to the needs of society? Political scientists...
11.1 State Capacity: What Makes a State Strong or Weak?
Political scientists often ask why some states govern effectively while others struggle to maintain order, enforce laws, or provide basic services. Some governments collect taxes efficiently, control their...
11.0 Political Science Module 11: State Strength, Governance, and Stability
Module 11 explains why some states govern effectively while others become weak, unstable, or even collapse. It begins with state capacity, the practical ability of a state to carry out its decisions, enforce...
10.8 Social Democracy, Democratic Socialism, and the Modern Left
In everyday political conversation, words like liberal, progressive, socialist, and left-wing are often used as though they all mean the same thing. However, these terms describe different ideas, traditions,...
10.7 Fascism: Total Mobilization, National Unity, and Dictatorship
Few political ideologies have had a greater impact on the twentieth century than fascism. Fascism emerged in the years following World War I during a period of economic hardship, political instability,...
10.6 Nationalism and Populism
Nationalism focuses on the relationship between people and the nation. Populism focuses on the relationship between ordinary citizens and political elites.
5.14 Spiritual Abuse
What happens when spiritual ideas are used in harmful ways? Throughout history, religious beliefs have inspired acts of compassion, courage, sacrifice, service, and personal transformation. At the same...
10.5 Conservatism: Tradition, Order, and Gradual Change
Conservatives generally argue that societies are complex and that institutions often contain valuable knowledge, traditions, and social arrangements that have developed over long periods of time. Because...
5.13 Discernment
How can a person know what is true? Throughout Christian history, believers have claimed to receive guidance from God. Others have claimed prophetic insight, visions, miracles, spiritual gifts, divine...
10.4 Liberalism: Liberty, Rights, and Individual Choice
Liberalism emerged during the Enlightenment as thinkers began questioning absolute monarchy, inherited privilege, and restrictions on individual freedom. Influenced by philosophers such as John Locke,...
5.12 Spiritual Warfare
Christianity often describes life as a spiritual battle. When many people hear the phrase spiritual warfare, they immediately think of demons, exorcisms, curses, possession, and supernatural conflict....
10.3 What Is a Political Ideology?
People often disagree about taxes, healthcare, immigration, education, crime, environmental policy, and countless other political issues. Yet beneath these debates, there are usually deeper disagreements...
5.11 Jesus’ Authority Over Evil Spirits
Throughout the Gospels, Jesus repeatedly encounters people described as being afflicted by demons, unclean spirits, and evil spirits. In these accounts, Jesus restores people to health, frees individuals...
10.2 Capitalism, Markets, and Mixed Economies
One of the most influential economic systems in the modern world is capitalism. At its core, capitalism is an economic system in which individuals and businesses can privately own property, invest resources,...
5.10 The Purpose of the Adversary
In the previous section, we examined some of the common modern misconceptions of Satan and how the Bible instead portrays him as the adversary, accuser, tempter, and deceiver.
10.1 Political Economy: Why Economics and Politics Cannot Be Separated
Every society must answer a few unavoidable questions. Who owns property? Who decides how resources are used? What should governments tax? How should wealth be created and distributed?
5.9 Satan
Satan is one of the most recognizable figures in Christianity. Yet many Christians are surprised to discover that the Bible does not present a single, detailed biography of Satan from beginning to end...
9.4 Realignment, Polarization, and Political Instability
Individual elections matter, but political scientists are often even more interested in the long-term patterns that emerge across many elections. Sometimes an election changes who holds office. Sometimes...
10.0 Political Science Module 10: Economic Systems & Political Ideologies
Module 10 explains how economic systems and political ideologies are connected. It begins with political economy, showing that economics and politics cannot be separated because questions about property,...
5.8 Demons in Christianity
The New Testament uses several related expressions, including demons (or devils), unclean spirits, evil spirits, and deceiving spirits. Although these terms are not always used in exactly the same way,...
5.0 Internet Module 5: Wi-Fi, Cellular, and Mobile Networks
See all of the sections in Module 5.
9.3 Voter Behavior: Why People Vote the Way They Do
In democratic societies, voting is one of the most important ways citizens participate in politics. Yet people often vote differently even when they are faced with the same candidates and political issues....
5.7 Angels in Christianity
Angels appear throughout both the Old and New Testaments and play an important role in Christian theology. They announce God’s plans, protect His people, deliver messages, execute judgment, and worship...
4.4 Data Centers and Internet Scale
Many people imagine that their data exists somewhere in "the cloud." The cloud is a useful concept, but the reality is much more physical. Behind most Internet services are buildings filled with computers,...
9.2 Public Opinion: How People Form Political Beliefs
Every society contains a wide variety of political opinions. Citizens disagree about the role of government, taxation, immigration, healthcare, education, foreign policy, individual rights, and countless...
4.3 Undersea Cables, Satellites, and Global Infrastructure
Many people imagine the Internet as something wireless, virtual, or floating in the cloud. In reality, the Internet depends on a vast physical infrastructure made of cables, data centers, routers, exchanges,...
5.6 Fruits of the Spirit
If spiritual gifts describe what a person is capable of doing, the fruits of the Spirit describe who a person is becoming. Throughout Christianity, the fruits of the Spirit have traditionally been viewed...
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