INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
Midterm Review
I. GENERAL RULES OF
THUMB
A. Time
Essay tests such as
this one put a premium on time. You will
not be able to commit all the details about a topic to paper. Concentrate instead on how the key concepts
relate to one another – and how specific examples support the various points
you make. Doing this successfully, of
course, requires that you BUDGET YOUR TIME.
B. Organization
Even though you are
pressed for time you still need to be organized in your writing. I suggest you take a minute or two to outline
your answer before you even begin writing it.
This also has the added benefit of providing a personal check against
omitting portions of a multi-faceted question, something that is easy to do
when you are under strict time constraints such as those for this exam.
C. Writing
Style
Remember that you will
be graded on your ability to express your ideas clearly as well as on the
content of your ideas. This is, after
all, a politics course where communication (or lack thereof) is essential to
determining the outcome. Subject content
is emphasized first and foremost in evaluating your answers, but the clarity of
your writing determines how successfully you get that message across. In simple terms, this means you need to write
legibly, use proper grammar, and avoid awkward sentence structure.
II. SPECIFIC QUESTION
TYPES
A. Essay
There will be one long
essay for the midterm. A complete answer
should contain:
1) an
introduction with your thesis
2) body
w/approximately three to four main points (it may be helpful to approach these
as IDs)
3) conclusion
which summarizes thesis and supporting points and offers suggestions,
solutions
B.
Identification (IDs/Short Essay)
There will be
approximately three to five identification questions that are best treated as
shorter essays. You must include a
definition, historical origin or reason for existence, examples, and relevant
theoretical analysis. In many cases it may also be helpful to refer to
competing perspectives.
C. Short Answer
There will be five to
ten short answer questions covering various readings or material presented in
class.
III. COURSE MATERIAL
This midterm covers
all lectures, readings, and class discussions (including current events
reports) since the beginning of the semester.
As you prepare, think about both the intricacies of the concepts
themselves and the larger picture of how they relate to one another. Major topics addressed to date include:
Melian Debate American
Hegemony
Civil
Defense
Redefining
International Security Deterrence Arms
Control
The Art of War Causes
of War Cold
War
Cyber Security Cuban
Missile Crisis Ballistic
Missile Defense
Espionage and
Intelligence Saudi
Time Bomb Russian,
Iranian, & Israeli WMD