Deck 7: Law and Politics

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Question
The people whom a policy will affecare called the

A)public.
B)faction.
C)tribe.
D)band.
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Question
According to anthropologists, all human disputes are dealwith by legal systems, nojusones thago to a formal court.
Question
When people feel thaa policy is wrong, buaccepibecause they value the governmentha makes the policy, they are giving a kind osupporcalled

A)legitimacy.
B)coercion.
C)authority.
D)leadership.
Question
When disputes are settled through a community meet?ing thaprovides for an informal airing othe conflict, we term this kind osettlemenprocess

A)an ordeal.
B)a court.
C)a moot.
D)a contest.
Question
The process omaking and carrying oupublic policy through the use oculturally defined categories and rules is called

A)the political system.
B)legitimacy.
C)coercion.
D)authority.
Question
A feud is an example of

A)coercion.
B)a legal dispute.
C)an infralegal dispute.
D)an extralegal dispute.
Question
A feud is a good example oa kind osupporcalled coercion.
Question
When the members oa society permitwo people to settle a dispute by fighting each other, we call their action self?redress and classify ias parothe legal system.
Question
Any guidelines thacan lead directly to action are called "policy."
Question
The cultural knowledge thapeople use to settle disputes by means oagents who have recognized authority is called

A)law.
B)politics.
C)a court.
D)self?redress.
Question
The righto make and enforce public policy is called

A)coercion.
B)authority.
C)legitimacy.
D)leadership.
Question
Anything thacontributes to the adoption opublic policy and its enforcemenis called

A)authority.
B)coercion.
C)legitimacy.
D)support.
Question
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," Gypsies frequently take one another's Social Security numbers in order to hide their identities.
Question
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Anne Sutherland describes a legal case in which a 19-year-old Gypsy man was convicted ousing someone else's Social Security number, despite the facthahe had no intention odefrauding anyone.
Question
Ia dictator makes people adhere to his policies by using force, his actions would fall under the definition osupport.
Question
The process omaking and carrying oupublic policy according to cultural categories and rules is called the political system.
Question
A leader is a person who obtains power through authority.
Question
The primary means ogaining conformity and order from individual members oa society is through enculturation.
Question
Among some Indian cultures, a(n) __________ is described as a supernaturally controlled, painful, or physically dangerous testhais used to settle a dispute.

A)moot
B)go-between
C)self-redress
D)ordeal
Question
A dispute thais below the level othe legal process and withouviolence is

A)a legal dispute.
B)an extralegal dispute.
C)an infralegal dispute.
D)a feud.
Question
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," Gypsies treaSocial Security numbers as

A)unimportant, because they do not use Social Security.
B)corporate property of their kin group, the vitsa.
C)a way to defraud banks so that they can get illegal loans.
D)a source of prestige, because they believe higher numbers bring greater success.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," a legal principle for the people who live in Ralu'a is "hacer el balance"-to make the balance.
Question
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland reports thafor Gypsies, going to jail

A)often provides needed time to recover from alcoholism.
B)helps them learn English and skills that facilitate getting real jobs in American society.
C)is welcomed because they finally get enough to eat there.
D)is an especially cruel punishment because it separates them from their kin.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," the agreed upon way to settle disputes is called

A)courts.
B)legal principles.
C)procedural law.
D)substantive law.
Question
in "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland notes thathe lawyer defending a young Gypsy man ousing a relative's Social Security number argued in courthat

A)the Gypsy had not intended to commit a crime when he used the number.
B)the Gypsy used the number because of a fear of pollution (marime) from non-Gypsies.
C)Gypsies did not traditionally use Social Security, so Social Security numbers had no importance to them.
D)many Gypsies are undocumented due to the broken immigration system.
Question
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," Gypsies find which othe following things polluting (marime)?

A)relatives from other vitsas
B)non-Gypsies
C)Social Security benefits
D)driving cars
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," there is no substantive law thaprohibits a man from beating his wife in the Zapotec village oRalu'a.
Question
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland argues thaGypsies hide their personal identities as a way to combapersecution by members othe societies in which they live.
Question
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," the largesgroup to which Gypsies belong is called the vitsa.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," in the Zapotec village oRalu'a, frightening someone so thathey come down with susto or magical fright, is a crime.
Question
In "Law and Order," Spradley and McCurdy argue thathe legal statutes thadefine righand wrong are

A)legal rules.
B)substantive law.
C)procedural law.
D)legal levels.
Question
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland describes a case in which a young Gypsy man was accused ofraud by police in St.Paul, Minnesota.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," in the Zapotec village oRalu'a two cases-a flirtation oa married man and a son who took coffee from his father withoupermission-illustrate

A)substantive law.
B)procedural law.
C)a legal principle.
D)infralegal law.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," the rule in Ralu'a thaprincipales and their families should nouse the courto settle family disputes is an example of

A)self-redress.
B)legal levels.
C)legal structure.
D)procedural law.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," a legal principle is defined as an agreed-upon way to settle a dispute.
Question
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," a young Gypsy man was indicted by the governmenfor

A)hiding his identity from authorities.
B)stealing cars.
C)using a relative's Social Security number.
D)lying to authorities about his real American name.
Question
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland notes thathe young Gypsy man she helped to defend in courrefused to eajail food, as a protesfor nobeing allowed to call his relatives.
Question
The case othe Gypsy defendandescribed by Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy" represents a good illustration owhahappens when

A)a foreign people takes advantage of a lenient judicial system.
B)greedy lawyers misrepresent their non-American clients.
C)anthropological testimony is misused in court.
D)a normal practice for one group is a crime for another.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," substantive law is codified in writing in literate societies.In non-literate societies, people define whaa crime is by using procedural law.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," the system olegal levels in the Zapotec village oRalu'a means thadisputes can only be settled by the presidente or principales.
Question
Eames' attempto become a registered "occasional postgraduate student" while in Nigeria was symbolic othe patrimonial bureaucracy there, because

A)the author was able to visit the required offices and complete the process in under an hour.
B)nothing about registering was routine; everything was personalized and no one could tell her how to go about registering.
C)registering was an impersonal, clearly defined process that was simple to complete.
D)it required the intervention of the American government.
Question
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," toward the end oher stay in Ralu'a, anthropologisLaura Nader "made the balance," by

A)convincing the priest that she was not a protestant.
B)working as a mayoral in the court.
C)donating a barrel of mescal at a fiesta.
D)giving gifts to the presidente and other town officials.
Question
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees,"
land mines successfully deter soldiers and protecsensitive sites.
Question
The famous American saying "It's nowhayou know, it's who you know" besdescribes the primary dynamic of

A)the legal bureaucracy of the United States.
B)the civil service system of the Han Dynasty in China.
C)the patrimonial authority of Nigerian society.
D)the constitutional monarchy of the United Kingdom.
Question
In Nigerian society, the term begging refers to the acoasking strangers for money or
food.
Question
When Eames was finally able to obtain her visa, icame through due to

A)a Nigerian custom called dash.
B)intervention by the American consulate.
C)intervention by the Nigerian government.
D)a Nigerian custom known as Long-Leg.
Question
In Nigeria, power and authority derive from

A)ownership of landed property.
B)the ability to grant favors to loyal dependents.
C)a person's wealth.
D)a person's social class.
Question
According to Elizabeth Eames in "Negotiating Nigerian Bureaucracies," Nigerian
bureaucracies, like those in the west, are organized on the principle Max Weber
called legal domination.
Question
Some othe mosimportanaspects oa patrimonial authority are the speed and
precision with which ioperates and the lack opersonalized relationships and irrational
considerations thaiincorporates.
Question
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees,"
individuals in Muleque, Angola, who have been injured by land mines are provided
with wheelchairs and prosthetics to make ieasier for them to gearound.
Question
In "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," Carolyn Nordstrom argues
thaan informal economy-one thais notaxed or monitored by the government-is
considered an extralegal network.
Question
According to Eames in in "Negotiating Nigerian Bureaucracies," patrimonial practices similar to those found in Nigerian society do occur in the United States.The use osuch practices

A)occurs solely in the political arena.
B)is considered an illegitimate way to conduct business.
C)cannot coexist within a system of bureaucratically organized, legal domination.
D)is considered a legitimate way to conduct business.
Question
Dash and Long-Leg are Nigerian terms tharefer to types orunners.
Question
As reported by Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," anthropologisLaura Nader feels thain Ralu'a, there is a strong value on_________, which underlies the community's substantive and procedural law.

A)private property
B)religious piety
C)personal success
D)maintaining equilibrium
Question
In "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," Nordstrom notes thathe
women in Muleque continued to clear farmland, plancrops, build shelters, and create
barter systems even after being disfigured or disabled by land mines.
Question
In the Western system olegal domination, an official's authority is based on

A)a given office, not the person who holds that office.
B)a combination of tradition and arbitrary decisions by the individual in charge.
C)who the officeholder knows in power above him or her.
D)how many individuals are indebted to him or her for past favors.
Question
In Nigerian society, a personal relationship is required to begin a business transaction.
Question
In slash-and-burn agriculture, small pieces oland are cultivated for a few years until
the soil is no longer fertile; then the piece oland is abandoned.
Question
According to Eames in "Negotiating Nigerian Bureaucracies," patrimonial authority is one thais organized as an extension oa noble household, where officials acas household servants and are dependents othe ruler.
Question
According to Eames in in "Negotiating Nigerian Bureaucracies," bribery

A)terminates a personal relationship.
B)can lead to arrest in Nigerian society.
C)initiates a personal relationship.
D)is very uncommon in Nigerian bureaucracy.
Question
In Nordstrom's article "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the local
coordinator for an NGO working with the amputees felthataking the goods made by
the Muleque women on an official NGO flighwas an improper use othe NGO's
equipment.
Question
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the firsstep in the informal economy formed by marginalized women in Muleque is

A)making products to sell at a small marketplace.
B)investment in a woman's informal bank.
C)hard labor.
D)begging.
Question
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the
Muleque women and other women in southern Africa often create their own self-run,
informal banking systems.
Question
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," when a woman receives the entire banking poin her informal banking group, she often will use the money to

A)purchase a boutique and set up a formal business.
B)build a decent home to live in.
C)buy a car and hire a driver.
D)invest in a small piece of farmland to grow and harvest crops to sell.
Question
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the efforts othe amputee women to group together, form banking systems, and move from local subsistence to international profitmaking

A)were a haphazard reaction to their circumstances.
B)were part of a carefully crafted plan of development.
C)brought significantly less money into the country than unauthorized diamond mining.
D)were not central to the economy of the country.
Question
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the United Nations worker equated __________ to the invisible center ogravity othe society.

A)women
B)men
C)informal economies
D)information banking systems
Question
In "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," Nordstrom illustrates thathe self-run, informal banking system thathe women oMuleque developed was

A)based on stability, trust, and allegiance.
B)regulated to ensure that a woman did not receive all of the money and then immediately leave the group.
C)taxed and monitored by the government.
D)unsuccessful in providing women with proceeds to invest in farming or other items.
Question
In "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," Nordstrom observes thathe earnings, networks, and contributions to developmenby the amputees and other women in Africa

A)do not contribute as much to the economy as the amount earned in unauthorized diamond mining.
B)rival the entire gross domestic products (GDPs) of the countries of this region of the world.
C)pale in comparison to the GDPs of countries in this region of the world.
D)do not rise to the level of the $1 billion a year lost from oil profits.
Question
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the
Muleque woman had friends in government, as well as in the mining and transport
industries, who regularly took their wares on flights or trucks going across the country.
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Deck 7: Law and Politics
1
The people whom a policy will affecare called the

A)public.
B)faction.
C)tribe.
D)band.
A
2
According to anthropologists, all human disputes are dealwith by legal systems, nojusones thago to a formal court.
False
3
When people feel thaa policy is wrong, buaccepibecause they value the governmentha makes the policy, they are giving a kind osupporcalled

A)legitimacy.
B)coercion.
C)authority.
D)leadership.
A
4
When disputes are settled through a community meet?ing thaprovides for an informal airing othe conflict, we term this kind osettlemenprocess

A)an ordeal.
B)a court.
C)a moot.
D)a contest.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The process omaking and carrying oupublic policy through the use oculturally defined categories and rules is called

A)the political system.
B)legitimacy.
C)coercion.
D)authority.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
A feud is an example of

A)coercion.
B)a legal dispute.
C)an infralegal dispute.
D)an extralegal dispute.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
A feud is a good example oa kind osupporcalled coercion.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
When the members oa society permitwo people to settle a dispute by fighting each other, we call their action self?redress and classify ias parothe legal system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Any guidelines thacan lead directly to action are called "policy."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The cultural knowledge thapeople use to settle disputes by means oagents who have recognized authority is called

A)law.
B)politics.
C)a court.
D)self?redress.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The righto make and enforce public policy is called

A)coercion.
B)authority.
C)legitimacy.
D)leadership.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Anything thacontributes to the adoption opublic policy and its enforcemenis called

A)authority.
B)coercion.
C)legitimacy.
D)support.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," Gypsies frequently take one another's Social Security numbers in order to hide their identities.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
14
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Anne Sutherland describes a legal case in which a 19-year-old Gypsy man was convicted ousing someone else's Social Security number, despite the facthahe had no intention odefrauding anyone.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
15
Ia dictator makes people adhere to his policies by using force, his actions would fall under the definition osupport.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
16
The process omaking and carrying oupublic policy according to cultural categories and rules is called the political system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
A leader is a person who obtains power through authority.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
18
The primary means ogaining conformity and order from individual members oa society is through enculturation.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Among some Indian cultures, a(n) __________ is described as a supernaturally controlled, painful, or physically dangerous testhais used to settle a dispute.

A)moot
B)go-between
C)self-redress
D)ordeal
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
A dispute thais below the level othe legal process and withouviolence is

A)a legal dispute.
B)an extralegal dispute.
C)an infralegal dispute.
D)a feud.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," Gypsies treaSocial Security numbers as

A)unimportant, because they do not use Social Security.
B)corporate property of their kin group, the vitsa.
C)a way to defraud banks so that they can get illegal loans.
D)a source of prestige, because they believe higher numbers bring greater success.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," a legal principle for the people who live in Ralu'a is "hacer el balance"-to make the balance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland reports thafor Gypsies, going to jail

A)often provides needed time to recover from alcoholism.
B)helps them learn English and skills that facilitate getting real jobs in American society.
C)is welcomed because they finally get enough to eat there.
D)is an especially cruel punishment because it separates them from their kin.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," the agreed upon way to settle disputes is called

A)courts.
B)legal principles.
C)procedural law.
D)substantive law.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
in "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland notes thathe lawyer defending a young Gypsy man ousing a relative's Social Security number argued in courthat

A)the Gypsy had not intended to commit a crime when he used the number.
B)the Gypsy used the number because of a fear of pollution (marime) from non-Gypsies.
C)Gypsies did not traditionally use Social Security, so Social Security numbers had no importance to them.
D)many Gypsies are undocumented due to the broken immigration system.
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k this deck
26
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," Gypsies find which othe following things polluting (marime)?

A)relatives from other vitsas
B)non-Gypsies
C)Social Security benefits
D)driving cars
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27
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," there is no substantive law thaprohibits a man from beating his wife in the Zapotec village oRalu'a.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland argues thaGypsies hide their personal identities as a way to combapersecution by members othe societies in which they live.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," the largesgroup to which Gypsies belong is called the vitsa.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," in the Zapotec village oRalu'a, frightening someone so thathey come down with susto or magical fright, is a crime.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
In "Law and Order," Spradley and McCurdy argue thathe legal statutes thadefine righand wrong are

A)legal rules.
B)substantive law.
C)procedural law.
D)legal levels.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland describes a case in which a young Gypsy man was accused ofraud by police in St.Paul, Minnesota.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," in the Zapotec village oRalu'a two cases-a flirtation oa married man and a son who took coffee from his father withoupermission-illustrate

A)substantive law.
B)procedural law.
C)a legal principle.
D)infralegal law.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," the rule in Ralu'a thaprincipales and their families should nouse the courto settle family disputes is an example of

A)self-redress.
B)legal levels.
C)legal structure.
D)procedural law.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," a legal principle is defined as an agreed-upon way to settle a dispute.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
According to Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy," a young Gypsy man was indicted by the governmenfor

A)hiding his identity from authorities.
B)stealing cars.
C)using a relative's Social Security number.
D)lying to authorities about his real American name.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
In "The Case oan American Gypsy," Sutherland notes thathe young Gypsy man she helped to defend in courrefused to eajail food, as a protesfor nobeing allowed to call his relatives.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
The case othe Gypsy defendandescribed by Sutherland in "The Case oan American Gypsy" represents a good illustration owhahappens when

A)a foreign people takes advantage of a lenient judicial system.
B)greedy lawyers misrepresent their non-American clients.
C)anthropological testimony is misused in court.
D)a normal practice for one group is a crime for another.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," substantive law is codified in writing in literate societies.In non-literate societies, people define whaa crime is by using procedural law.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," the system olegal levels in the Zapotec village oRalu'a means thadisputes can only be settled by the presidente or principales.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Eames' attempto become a registered "occasional postgraduate student" while in Nigeria was symbolic othe patrimonial bureaucracy there, because

A)the author was able to visit the required offices and complete the process in under an hour.
B)nothing about registering was routine; everything was personalized and no one could tell her how to go about registering.
C)registering was an impersonal, clearly defined process that was simple to complete.
D)it required the intervention of the American government.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
According to Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," toward the end oher stay in Ralu'a, anthropologisLaura Nader "made the balance," by

A)convincing the priest that she was not a protestant.
B)working as a mayoral in the court.
C)donating a barrel of mescal at a fiesta.
D)giving gifts to the presidente and other town officials.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees,"
land mines successfully deter soldiers and protecsensitive sites.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
The famous American saying "It's nowhayou know, it's who you know" besdescribes the primary dynamic of

A)the legal bureaucracy of the United States.
B)the civil service system of the Han Dynasty in China.
C)the patrimonial authority of Nigerian society.
D)the constitutional monarchy of the United Kingdom.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
In Nigerian society, the term begging refers to the acoasking strangers for money or
food.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
When Eames was finally able to obtain her visa, icame through due to

A)a Nigerian custom called dash.
B)intervention by the American consulate.
C)intervention by the Nigerian government.
D)a Nigerian custom known as Long-Leg.
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Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
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47
In Nigeria, power and authority derive from

A)ownership of landed property.
B)the ability to grant favors to loyal dependents.
C)a person's wealth.
D)a person's social class.
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48
According to Elizabeth Eames in "Negotiating Nigerian Bureaucracies," Nigerian
bureaucracies, like those in the west, are organized on the principle Max Weber
called legal domination.
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49
Some othe mosimportanaspects oa patrimonial authority are the speed and
precision with which ioperates and the lack opersonalized relationships and irrational
considerations thaiincorporates.
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50
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees,"
individuals in Muleque, Angola, who have been injured by land mines are provided
with wheelchairs and prosthetics to make ieasier for them to gearound.
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51
In "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," Carolyn Nordstrom argues
thaan informal economy-one thais notaxed or monitored by the government-is
considered an extralegal network.
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52
According to Eames in in "Negotiating Nigerian Bureaucracies," patrimonial practices similar to those found in Nigerian society do occur in the United States.The use osuch practices

A)occurs solely in the political arena.
B)is considered an illegitimate way to conduct business.
C)cannot coexist within a system of bureaucratically organized, legal domination.
D)is considered a legitimate way to conduct business.
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53
Dash and Long-Leg are Nigerian terms tharefer to types orunners.
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54
As reported by Spradley and McCurdy in "Law and Order," anthropologisLaura Nader feels thain Ralu'a, there is a strong value on_________, which underlies the community's substantive and procedural law.

A)private property
B)religious piety
C)personal success
D)maintaining equilibrium
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55
In "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," Nordstrom notes thathe
women in Muleque continued to clear farmland, plancrops, build shelters, and create
barter systems even after being disfigured or disabled by land mines.
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56
In the Western system olegal domination, an official's authority is based on

A)a given office, not the person who holds that office.
B)a combination of tradition and arbitrary decisions by the individual in charge.
C)who the officeholder knows in power above him or her.
D)how many individuals are indebted to him or her for past favors.
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57
In Nigerian society, a personal relationship is required to begin a business transaction.
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58
In slash-and-burn agriculture, small pieces oland are cultivated for a few years until
the soil is no longer fertile; then the piece oland is abandoned.
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59
According to Eames in "Negotiating Nigerian Bureaucracies," patrimonial authority is one thais organized as an extension oa noble household, where officials acas household servants and are dependents othe ruler.
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60
According to Eames in in "Negotiating Nigerian Bureaucracies," bribery

A)terminates a personal relationship.
B)can lead to arrest in Nigerian society.
C)initiates a personal relationship.
D)is very uncommon in Nigerian bureaucracy.
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61
In Nordstrom's article "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the local
coordinator for an NGO working with the amputees felthataking the goods made by
the Muleque women on an official NGO flighwas an improper use othe NGO's
equipment.
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62
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the firsstep in the informal economy formed by marginalized women in Muleque is

A)making products to sell at a small marketplace.
B)investment in a woman's informal bank.
C)hard labor.
D)begging.
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63
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the
Muleque women and other women in southern Africa often create their own self-run,
informal banking systems.
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64
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," when a woman receives the entire banking poin her informal banking group, she often will use the money to

A)purchase a boutique and set up a formal business.
B)build a decent home to live in.
C)buy a car and hire a driver.
D)invest in a small piece of farmland to grow and harvest crops to sell.
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65
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the efforts othe amputee women to group together, form banking systems, and move from local subsistence to international profitmaking

A)were a haphazard reaction to their circumstances.
B)were part of a carefully crafted plan of development.
C)brought significantly less money into the country than unauthorized diamond mining.
D)were not central to the economy of the country.
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66
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the United Nations worker equated __________ to the invisible center ogravity othe society.

A)women
B)men
C)informal economies
D)information banking systems
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67
In "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," Nordstrom illustrates thathe self-run, informal banking system thathe women oMuleque developed was

A)based on stability, trust, and allegiance.
B)regulated to ensure that a woman did not receive all of the money and then immediately leave the group.
C)taxed and monitored by the government.
D)unsuccessful in providing women with proceeds to invest in farming or other items.
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68
In "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," Nordstrom observes thathe earnings, networks, and contributions to developmenby the amputees and other women in Africa

A)do not contribute as much to the economy as the amount earned in unauthorized diamond mining.
B)rival the entire gross domestic products (GDPs) of the countries of this region of the world.
C)pale in comparison to the GDPs of countries in this region of the world.
D)do not rise to the level of the $1 billion a year lost from oil profits.
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69
According to Nordstrom in "Illegal Economies and the Untold Story oAmputees," the
Muleque woman had friends in government, as well as in the mining and transport
industries, who regularly took their wares on flights or trucks going across the country.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.