UA-47897071-1
Showing posts with label state. Show all posts
Showing posts with label state. Show all posts

Monday 9 June 2014

Diplomatic norms and rules



Ultimately, diplomacy rests on a norm of coexistence, allowing polities “to live and let live.” In the words of Garrett Mattingly, “unless people realize that they have to live together, indefinitely, in spite of their differences, diplomats have no place to stand.” Acceptance of coexistence reflects the realization on the part of polities that they are mutually dependent to a significant degree. Interdependence may be, and is most often, asymmetrical. Yet coexistence implies, if not equality, at least equal rights to participate in international intercourse.
Whereas the specific rules of the institution of diplomacy have varied over time, reciprocity appears to be a core normative theme running through all diplomatic practice. Reciprocity implies that exchanges should be of roughly equivalent values. In other words, reciprocity is meant to produce “balanced” exchanges. Moreover, reciprocity entails contingency, insofar as actions are conditional on responses from others.
Reciprocal behavior returns good for good, ill for ill. The norm of reciprocity lends an amount of predictability to diplomatic relations. While not offering exact predictability, it makes it possible for polities to know the general range of possible outcomes of their exchanges. The distinction between specific and diffuse reciprocity is pertinent in this connection. Specific reciprocity refers to “situations in which specified partners exchange items of equivalent value in a strictly delimited sequence,” whereas in situations of diffuse reciprocity “the definition of equivalence is less precise … and the sequence of events is less narrowly bounded.” Diffuse reciprocity implies that the parties do not insist on immediate and exactly equivalent reciprocation of each and every concession, on an appropriate “quid” for every “quo.”
Buyers and sellers of houses or cars practice specific reciprocity; families or groups of close friends rely on diffuse reciprocity. Reciprocity in diplomatic relations falls in between, or oscillates between the two poles. The difference between the two types of reciprocity has to do with trust. Whereas the kind of trust that binds families together is most often lacking in the relations between polities, the institution of diplomacy lends a modicum of trust that distinguishes these relations from, say, those
between buyers and sellers.
In fact, if we posit contingency and equivalence as the two basic dimensions of social exchange characterizing reciprocity, we can identify mixed reciprocity patterns. A highly contingent action is a fairly immediate response to an action taken by another, whereas a less contingent action may take place after a longer period of time or even in advance of the other’s action. Equivalence refers to a comparison of the perceived values of goods given and received. Contingency and equivalence vary continuously, but if we – for analytical purposes – treat them dichotomously, we end up with four types of reciprocity.
The practice of expelling foreign diplomats for espionage may illustrate specific reciprocity. States today recognize that when they expel diplomats from a foreign country, that government is likely to respond in kind by immediately expelling an equivalent number of their own diplomats. The anticipation of specific reciprocity therefore often deters states from uncooperative behavior.
Compliance with the norms and rules guiding diplomatic exchange can be seen as an instance of diffuse reciprocity. Specific repayment is not expected from such behavior, and mutual benefits are assumed to even out over the long term. During the Concert of Europe era, for example, statesmen made more concessions to others than was specifically required. Similar patterns of diffuse reciprocity can be observed in the European Union of today.


Figure 1 Patterns of reciprocity




The mixed pattern of reciprocity in the lower-left cell of Figure 1 occurs when actors are concerned about short-term outcomes, but less concerned about the specific value of individual exchanges. Consider, for example, the exchanges between the United States and China prior to the mutual presidential visits in 1997 and 1998. President Clinton was pressured by Congress, which was seeking to impose sanctions against China because of its human-rights violations, to secure a significant human-rights concession from China as a prerequisite for the state visit. Just before Jiang Zemin’s arrival in the United States, a prominent Chinese political prisoner was released. While one political prisoner’s freedom could not be – and was not – considered “equal” in value to the political and economic benefits China was likely to reap from the summit, the US Administration was apparently sufficiently satisfied with this specific concession to welcome the Chinese President and negotiate a wide range of issues.
The upper-right cell signifies a different mixed pattern, where actors are concerned about the specific value of an individual exchange but focus on longer-term relations. An example may be John Foster Dulles’s refusal to shake hands with Zhou Enlai at the 1954 Geneva Conference, which was read by the Chinese as a signal of American rejection and contempt and harmed US–Chinese relations for years to come.
Among the procedural rules of diplomacy, immunity has assumed prominence throughout history. The inviolability of diplomatic agents is seen to be a prerequisite for the establishment of stable relations between polities. “Rooted in necessity, immunity was buttressed by religion, sanctioned by custom, and fortified by reciprocity.” The sanctity of diplomatic messengers in the ancient world implied inviolability and thus foreshadowed more recent notions of diplomatic immunity.
Traditional codes of hospitality may have contributed to the notion of according diplomatic envoys inviolability. “The ancient Greeks and Romans considered it impious to injure a guest, as did the Celts, the Gauls, and the Teutons.” The most perennial and robust foundation of diplomatic immunity seems to be functional necessity: the privileges and immunities that diplomatic envoys have enjoyed throughout the ages have simply been seen as necessary to enable diplomats to perform their functions.

?After-reading activities

1 Comprehension questions
1 What does coexistence mean?
2 What does the concept of reciprocity stand for?
3 What types of reciprocity can be singled out? Give examples of each type.
4 What type of reciprocity do diplomatic relations involve?
5 What are the basic dimensions of social exchanges? Give examples of each type.
6 What is specific reciprocity? What diplomatic actions can illustrate this concept?
7 What is diffuse reciprocity? What is the difference between diffuse and specific reciprocity?
8 Where do patterns of mixed reciprocity occur? Give examples.
9 What does diplomatic immunity mean?
10 What are the historical foundations for immunity?

Work with the dictionary and consult the text to do tasks 2 and 3

2 Translate  words and word combinations  from English into  Ukrainian and use them in your own sentences
         Coexistence; mutually; interdependence; intercourse; reciprocity; to imply; to entail; contingency; predictability; diffuse; quid; quo; to oscillate; modicum; pattern; dichotomously; espionage; anticipation; imprecise; short-term; wide range of issues; inviolability; to buttress; to foreshadow; notion; impious; perennial

3 Translate from Ukrainian into English

Рівність; випадковість, непередбачувана обставина; виганяти; шпигунство; що не співпрацює, неузгоджений у діях; взаємна вигода; довгостроковий; "європейський концерт" (перша стійка міжнародна система сформована на Віденському конгресі 1815 р.); поступка; наслідок; передумова; вітати, гостинно приймати; вести переговори; дипломатичний представник; схалювати; гостинність; уповноважений

4 Complete the sentences with words or phrases from the list
Inviolability; norm; reciprocity; Concert of Europe; equivalence; welcome; negotiated; contingent; interdependence; espionage

1.     The postwar era, however, has seen the principle of rotation become the _______.
2.     The government preaches the virtues of __________, cooperation and human values.
3.     Third, certain principles which have been employed to justify diplomatic privilege, namely the sovereignty of the sending state and __________, have not been used to justify international privileges.

4.     Thus the development of European diplomacy can be located in terms not so much of a theory of modernization through government development as of the __________ nature of a states system that was distinctive, rather than modern.
5.     This diplomacy of assertion reflected the extent to which the Security Council represented a very public breach with any principle of _________ between sovereign bodies.
6.     __________, much of which involved postal interception and deciphering, was  significant, not least for spying on foreign diplomats.
7.     The peaceful (to Western publics) management of the expansion of rival empires was an important instance of a more general process by which the _______   ___ ______ adapted to a range of challenges and changes.
8.     On the other hand, they cannot ________ their publics sharing their own convictions about the notional quality of international politics because, in the end, they think that international order depends upon such notions being accepted.
9.     There are no big secrets to be revealed, only small uncertainties to be __________ on a case-by-case basis.
10. The first stage, beginning in 1804, witnessed the extension of the status of neutrality and the protection of __________ to various riparian commissions and of "diplomatic privileges" to some international commissions.

5 Say if the following statements are true according to the text.
1 Coexistence is impossible without equality.
2 Reciprocity means exchange of equivalent values.
3 Reciprocity makes diplomatic relations more predictable.
4 Specific reciprocity implies that the parties do not insist on immediate and exactly equivalent reciprocation of each and every concession.
5 Equivalence means comparison of the values of goods given and received.
6 Expelling diplomats is the case of diffused reciprocity.
7 In European Union examples of diffuse reciprocity can be found.
8 The sanctity of diplomatic messengers in the ancient world was not connected with diplomatic immunity.
9 The ancient Greeks and Romans considered it impolite to injure a guest.
10 Diplomatic immunity is rooted in functional necessity.

  Write an essay on norms and rules in Ukrainian diplomacy. Illustrate the key notions discussed in the text with the examples involving Ukrainian diplomats and officials.

Tuesday 8 April 2014

Francis Fukuyama "The Origins of Political Order"



1 Watch the video  and put the words into the gaps in the text.

Thank you, it’s really a great honor to be here and to have this wonderful (1)___ and I’m very grateful that you’re all here for politics in prose.  One of the really nice things about being able to speak about a new book is to go to real brick and mortar (2)____ and to realize that there are still people that really like real books and come out for events like this because of the intellectual (3)____ and interest. So thank you all for coming.
So I’m going to get straight into it. I wrote this book for a number of reasons. Samuel Huntington, a political (4)___, was my teacher when I was a graduate student at Harvard.  He wrote a very important book in 1968 called “Political (5)___ in Changing Societies” which I think rereading it now in light of the Arab spring actually is probably one of the best guides to what is going on in the Middle East at the present moment. But it’s a book that needed to be (6)____, and I thought of a project of, you know, doing a revision of this book. Among other things that open on the very first page it says: “The Soviet Union and the United States are equally developed political orders” and that didn’t seem quite right after the fall of the Berlin (7)___. But the other, you know, major issue is the one that was just referred to,  I’ve been thinking about nation building, failed states, Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, here are all of these (8)____ challenges that we’ve faced and we have this illusion which I would call ‘the problem of getting to ‘Denmark’ and “Denmark” is in quotation marks ‘cause Denmark is actually not a real country, it’s this mythical place that has low (9)___, democracy, stable government, good services delivered very efficiently, and so forth. We have this vision of ‘Denmark’ in the back of our heads, and then we go to a place like Afghanistan and we say: “Well, how we’re going to get Afghanistan to look like Denmark?” And it doesn’t work very well. And part of the reason I began to realize was that we don’t (10)____ how Denmark got to be Denmark. I actually have had a Visiting Professorship in Aarhus University in Denmark, so I’ve been going to Denmark for the last few years. And I’ll tell you that most Danes actually have no idea how Denmark got to be Denmark. And so it struck me as a political scientist that there ought to be a basic book you can go to say where political (11)___ come from. I didn’t see one, and so I decided to write and so that’s why we get this book that I’ve produced. So I also did not want to write a book on the (12)____ of politics that holds this traditional Eurocentric or Anglocentric story not because I am opposed to England or the West, but I think it’s a distortion. And it’s one that’s been, you know, it’s taught still in a lot of the discourse that really begins with Karl Marx that sees England as the model for modernization. “England’s present is everybody’s future”, - this is something actually that Karl Marx said. And what do you realize, when you actually learn something about the history of England, is that it is a very peculiar country in a number of ways that I will explain to you. And to expect other countries to replicate the England’s (13)____ path, I think, is highly unrealistic. And in fact, in my view, it was China, not that China, it did not establish the first state, that happened in a lot of places: in Egypt, in Mesopotamia, in the valley of Mexico. But in my view the Chinese (14)____ the first modern state, modern meaning, not based on hiring your cousins and your friends to (15)____ the government, but based on (16)___ examinations, a rational (17)____, centralized administration. And they did this in the third century BC. And it’s a historical (18)____ that I think a lot of people have not adequately recognized. And  so instead of starting with England or, you know, Greece and Rome and then going for the Magna Carta and the rise of democracy in England it seemed to me it made more sense to start with China. China created the first modern state, why are other societies different from China? So that’s the basic background.
Now there are three important baskets of political (19)___ that we need to think about. The first is a state itself. The state is all about power, the state is the ability to concentrate power in a hierarchy and to use it to (20)___ rules over a particular territory, right.  In the developing world, and this again is why I think we sometimes take politics for granted. We assume that things will happen like, you know, long time I lived in Fairfax County for twenty years and the potholes always get filled every spring. Why do those potholes get filled there but not in Papua New Guinea? Well, it turns out there’s a hidden social (21)____ that provides these services and it does it pretty efficiently, at least in a rich county like Fairfax, not in the only district. But, you know, it’s interesting, you know, why those differences happen and I think that all of the anti-government activists of which there are many in especially in our society don’t understand that if you want a country that doesn’t have a strong (22)____ that is able to enforce rules we are to move to Somalia or Afghanistan or, you know, any less-developed country that actually cannot enforce rules on its own territory.  In Somalia if you want to own not just an assault rifle but an RPJ or a shoulder- fired anti-aircraft weapon you are free to do it. But it’s not a very happy (23)____ because it doesn’t have institutions. Now that’s the state.
      Second is the rule of law. The rule of law is all about community rules of (24)___ that are regarded as superior to the will of whoever happens to be running the government whether that is a President, a Prime Minister, a  king, (25)___, whatever. The executive in the society doesn’t feel that he or she can just make up the (26)____ on the fly whatever they want, but they actually have to implement a law that someone else makes, all right. So that’s the second set of important institutions.
      And then the third is institutions of accountability.  Today we associate those with (27)___, with elections, but that’s not the only form of accountability. In any of them when accountability institutions were first put into place in 17th century England the king was accountable to Parliament that only represented ten percent of the English (28)____, richest ten percent. And so you can have accountability without having democracy. And I believe as in China you can also have moral accountability that is to say a government can feel obligated to take the interest of its citizens into account even in the absence of election. So the question is: “Where do these come from: the state is all about the concentration of (29)____, the rule of law and accountability are by all means limiting power?” And the miracle of modern politics is that you get the President of the United States, who is the most powerful individual in human history, who can nuke the rest of the world if he wants to, but he doesn’t because it’s all (30)____ by law and by accountable political institutions.  It’s a kind of miracle of modern politics, right.
So I’m going to tell you if you a few stories from the book in each of these baskets. Let’s begin with the state. The state, in some sense, in my view, is a big (31)____ against the family. Human nature tells you a couple of things, there’s a universal (32)____. And there are a couple of biological principles that govern human sociability. We sometimes get this incorrect notion from Thomas Hobbes that before the rise of the state you had just people clubbing each other over the head, you know, in anomic (33)___ of all against all.  But that was actually never true, human (34)____ never went through that period. They were always social and they’re social because they’re born with certain characteristics that allow them to (35)____.  So one of them is a principal called ‘kin selection or inclusive fitness’ by the biologists which simply means you’re going to be altruistic to people in proportion to the number of genes you share with them. In other words nepotism, you’re going to favor relatives. The second principal is reciprocal altruism:  you scratch my back - I’ll (36)____ yours, on a face- to- face basis.  No human child growing up anywhere has to be taught these (37)____, these are inbuilt forms of sociability. They are the default ways that we relate to each other, (38)____ and family. And in the absence of a modern institution that forces you to hire somebody with qualifications rather than your cousin or your brother-in-law, that’s the way you’re going to do it, that’s the kind of normal politics that will insert itself. And so in a sense the, you know, states and roles in the societies that were organized tribally meaning the people were in large kin groups, they all believe that their descended from a common (39)____, that they’re basically third and fourth and fifth cousins.
And how do you get from a state that is based on kinship as a form of social organization to one that’s based on (40)____, in which it’s not a matter of who you are related it’s the fact that I am a citizen of the state of France or Japan, or whatever?  And so that’s why there’s a struggle, constant struggle against especially this biological urge to protect your (41)___. Now how did this happen in China? It unfortunately happened as a result of century’s long military conflict. There’s a famous political (42)____ Charles Chile who was famous for arguing in the case of Europe that the state makes war and war makes the state, that it’s really military (43)____ that drove people out of tribal societies into these more organized hierarchical units. And if you look at Chinese history, that is exactly the story that unfolds.

bookstores
challenge
audience









run
understand
scientist
origins
civil service
institutions
bureaucracy
established
foreign policy
modernization
corruption
updated
wall
Order
achievement





























structure
society
government
enforce
institutions









monarch
rules
justice





population
limited
democracy
power










scratch
friends

struggle
mechanisms
human nature
war
ancestor
societies
cooperate







children
competition
scientist
citizenship


2 Vocabulary focus. Sudy the words and  word combinations, practise their translation, spelling. Check your knowledge in the test. Play vocabulary game and set your own vocabulary game record.

3 Mark the following statements as True or False.

1.     The book “Political Order in Changing Society” can be a guide to what is going on in Africa and Latin America.
2.     People want to create the state with low corruption, democracy and stable government but it doesn’t work in all countries.
3.     Danes have the recipe of ‘getting to Denmark’, they teach it at universities to all citizens.
4.     Traditionally political scientists are Eurocentric and Anglocentric when they write about the origins of the state.
5.     China was the first to establish state.
6.     Chinese state was modern because it was not based on hiring your cousins and your friends to run the government, but was based on civil service examinations.
7.     There are four important baskets of political institutions that political scientists think about.
8.     Many people take politics for granted and believe that the services their state gives to them are the same all over the world, e.g. potholes are filled every spring in Fairfax County and in Papua New Guinea.
9.     If people want a country that doesn’t have a strong government that is able to enforce rules, they soon find themselves in a less-developed country.
10. In Somalia you can own any weapon you want but it doesn’t make people happy.
11. In a country ruled by law presidents, kings and prime ministers cannot make the laws they want when they want to.
12. In a country ruled by law presidents, prime ministers, kings implement laws that were created by other politicians.
13. In 17th century England we can find examples of democracy and accountability.
14. In China moral accountability existed.
15. Accountability is not always connected with elections.
16. State is a struggle against the family because rulers and kings want their friends and cousins to rule too.
17. In human history people never were in the state of war against all other people, human beings had special mechanisms that helped them to cooperate.
18. People tend to like their relatives more that other people in the group.
19. In tribal societies all people believe that they are relatives and have common ancestor.
20. Tribal societies are based on citizenship but modern state is based on kinship.

4 Answer the Questions.
1.     Why do scientists need to update and revise books like “Political Order in Changing Society”? What important events took place in history since the book was written?
2.     What does the speaker mean when he mentions ‘the problem of getting to Denmark? Why is Denmark a model country for some people?
3.     Why was Chinese state different from other states?
4.     What countries are traditionally seen as models of modernization? Why are those countries seen as models of modernization? Is it still relevant today?
5.     What is state? Does the speaker support a weak or a strong government?
6.     What can people living in a country with weak government have? Will their society be happy?
7.     What is the rule of law? How does the rule of law influence kings, monarchs, presidents and prime ministers?
8.     What is accountability? What forms or types of accountability can political scientists name?
9.     What is human sociability? Why is it important in political science?
10. How did political scientists of the past (e.g. Thomas Hobbes) see human nature? Were they right?
11. What types of altruism are important for political science? How does each type influence development of the state?
12. How was modern form of state developed in China? What influenced its development?

Tuesday 21 January 2014

Primary Elections Explained




Put the correct words from a–d below in the text. Watch the video to check your answers


Primary elections are how political parties in the US pick their strongest (1)____ to run for president. The parties do this by holding mini-elections in each of the states and the candidate with the most (2)____ from these elections becomes the parties  “official nominees”, these nominees then face each other in the national election for president. But this isn’t the whole story. There are 5 things that make it a bit more complicated than that.
      Complication № 1. Primaries and Caucuses.
In every state, the local party leaders decide how to run their elections. The most common choices are (3)____ and caucuses. Primaries are just like standard elections. Go to the polls whenever you can, stand in long line, hide in a booth, then tick a box or press a button and your vote is cast in complete anonymity. A caucus, however is a public (4)___. People gather in groups, wherever space is available, then literally take sides in the room with everyone else who likes the same (5)___. The groups debate each other and if people change their minds, they need to physically switch sides. At the end of the debates the party representatives count the number of people in each group. If you leave too early, your vote doesn’t (6)____.
       This description of primaries and caucuses is really all you need to know but the specifics can vary widely. That’s because there are 50 (7)___ all of which hold at least two primaries and caucuses for the big parties, and possibly more for the small (8)___. Covering all the local variants would take a tediously long time, which your short attention span for boring political videos wouldn’t  tolerate – and you need to stay focused because there are 4 more things to cover.
Complication № 2. Who can vote?
    In the National Presidential election all American (9)___ over the age of 18 can vote, with 2 exceptions, you can’t live here (prison) or here (territories). But primaries are in–state elections with lots of different  rules. Most states and parties will only let you vote in the primary if you are an official member of the party. This is called a closed primary, because the voting is closed to (10)____ members, but some citizens are independents and not registered with any party. If you are independent and live in a state with closed party elections, tough luck, no voting for you. Some states, however, have semi-closed primaries where (11)___ can pick one and only one primary to vote in. Parties allow this because the presidential election is often determined by independents, so knowing which candidates they like is useful. Finally, in a few states the parties really play fast and loose with open primaries, here any citizens no matter which party they’re (12)___ with can pick a primary to vote in. But it’s not just the states that have primaries. They’re also held in the District of Columbia and we all forgot territories holding primaries. Here it is a bit odd though, considering the territorial (13)___ can’t vote in the actual presidential election. Lastly, there are Americans living (14)___ who, depending on the party, vote in a block as though they all live together in one big extra state. When all these elections take place depends on Complication № 3.
Complication  № 3. Who votes when?
   Primaries are  not conducted all at once, but are (15)___ out over a year. This leads to fights between the states about who gets to be at the head of the line, who is stuck at the back.  Inevitably last minute (16)____ dates happens even if the parties often take away votes from these uncivil states. When it comes to be number one nobody beats New Hampshire, who wrote it into state law that their primary will always be at least a week ahead of everyone else’s. This isn’t a problem until some other state has the bright idea to do the same, and then we have an infinite loop in our system and have to force a law. But wait, you say: “Doesn’t Iowa already go first?” Yes, but New Hampshire lets them get away with it for two reasons: first,  Iowa’s election is a caucus and so New Hampshire is still technically the first primary. And second:  New Hampshire thinks that Iowa is stupid and doesn’t matter.
    Other states try to (17)____ their influence not by cutting in line but by forming an alliance and holding their primaries at the same time. The biggest (18)___ of the election cycle is called Super Tuesday where, depending on how many states can agree with each other, around half of them might (19)___ giving out a whole pile of votes. Which brings us to Complication  № 4.
     Complication  № 4. Votes, that aren’t votes.
        So this whole time you’re were probably thinking that citizens give votes straight to the candidates, but no. Instead, the votes are given to a bunch of guys, called delegates, who in turn, will give them to candidates as requested. Maybe... Depending on the state, delegates might be required to vote as the citizens did, or they might be completely free to ignore the citizens and vote for whomever they want. Who are these people? The (20)____ are local party VIPs, such as state reps and officials.
The more citizens who live in a state, the more delegates that state gets. Later in the year, when all the states have finished their primaries, the delegates travel to a huge gathering for their party called the National (21)_____. It’s here that the official vote to select the party’s (22)_____ for president happens. But it’s not just these delegates who do the voting.
    Complication № 5. Super Delegates.
    Super delegates are the top members of the party such as (23)____ and former presidents. They go to the National Convention not to (24)____ the people but to represent the current party establishment and can vote for whomever they want. Depending on the party, the super delegates might be up to 20% of the voters at the National Convention. Usually by the time the national convention happens all the  candidates, save one, have dropped out of the (25)_____, so the convention is just a rubber stamp and a big party. But if the fight between candidates is still ongoing, the delegates and super delegates are the ones with the (26)_____ decision.
       In summary: Over the course of a year the states, plus DC, plus the territories, and the Americans abroad hold their primaries or caucuses. When finished the delegates representing the citizens who voted in those elections travel to the national convention. Most of the delegates are forced to vote as the citizens of their state wanted them to, but some of them are free to vote as they like. At the national convention the delegates meet up with the super delegates who represent the best interests of the party and together they make the final decision on who will be the nominee for (27)____. Tired? Don’t be, because now the race for the presidency began. Of course, you can skip all that and jump straight into the election as an (28)_____, the only downside to this strategy is nearly certain defeat.

1.
(a)
nominate
(b)
politics
(c)
party
(d)
candidate
2.
(a)
voter
(b)
votes
(c)
voting
(d)
elections
3.
(a)
primal
(b)
prime
(c)
primaries
(d)
first election
4.
(a)
voter
(b)
vote
(c)
elections
(d)
voter
5.
(a)
persons
(b)
parties
(c)
candidate
(d)
man
6.
(a)
count
(b)
calculate
(c)
assess
(d)
evaluate
7.
(a)
country
(b)
states
(c)
nation
(d)
people
8.
(a)
voter
(b)
candidate
(c)
election
(d)
parties
9.
(a)
citizens
(b)
citizenship
(c)
person
(d)
American
10.
(a)
non-political
(b)
non-party
(c)
indifferent
(d)
foreign
11.
(a)
independents
(b)
independence
(c)
non-party
(d)
sovereignty
12.
(a)
familiar
(b)
fixed
(c)
registered
(d)
registration
13.
(a)
residents
(b)
inhabitants
(c)
citizen
(d)
native
14.
(a)
far
(b)
away
(c)
out
(d)
abroad
15.
(a)
spread
(b)
divide
(c)
last
(d)
split
16.
(a)
ploy
(b)
conflict
(c)
defrauding
(d)
fighting
17.
(a)
boost
(b)
grow
(c)
improve
(d)
changing
18.
(a)
union
(b)
united
(c)
compromise
(d)
alliance
19.
(a)
take
(b)
participate
(c)
participant
(d)
make
20.
(a)
delegates
(b)
delegation
(c)
politician
(d)
voter
21.
(a)
union
(b)
alliance
(c)
collection
(d)
Convention
22.
(a)
nominate
(b)
nominee
(c)
nomination
(d)
name
23.
(a)
congressmen
(b)
congress
(c)
politics
(d)
delegate
24.
(a)
help
(b)
vote
(c)
represent
(d)
presentation
25.
(a)
tournament
(b)
competition
(c)
run
(d)
race
26.
(a)
end
(b)
final
(c)
last
(d)
latest
27.
(a)
president
(b)
presidential
(c)
leading
(d)
president’s
28.
(a)
single
(b)
sovereign
(c)
independent
(d)
independence

1 Give Ukrainian equivalents for the following words and expressions.
Primary, caucus, to boost, nominee, to require.

2 Comprehension questions.
1.     Who can vote?
2.     What do primaries mean?
3.     What is the name of the biggest alliance of the election cycle?
4.     Who are the delegates?
5.     What decision do delegates make at the national convention?

3 Say if the following statements are true according to the text.
1.     At the end of the debates party representative counts the number of people in each group.
2.     In the National Presidential election all American citizens over the age of 16 can vote.
3.     Iowa’s election is a caucus and so New Hampshire is still technically the first primary.
4.     The biggest alliance of the election cycle is called Super Thursday.
5.     The delegates are local party VIPs, such as state reps and officials.
6.     When all the states have finished their primaries, the delegates travel to a huge gathering for their party called the National Convention.
7.     Super delegates are the top members of the party such as congressmen and former presidents.
8.     If you leave too early your vote doesn’t count.
9.     Most states and parties will only let you vote in the primary if you are an official member of the party.
 Depending on the party, the super delegates might be up to 45% of the voters at the National Convention.