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Practice Quiz
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1
As explained in "Darwin's Truth, Jefferson's Vision," the theory of sociobiology holds that human behavior is largely dependent on:
A)cultural conditions.
B)individual family dynamics.
C)evolution.
D)threats from humans.
2
Taboos, as explained in "Don't Even Think About It!" relate to:
A)superstitious customs.
B)long-standing habits.
C)respecting boundaries.
D)natural laws.
3
Changes in attitudes toward death, as presented in "Mortality Around the World," particularly in industrialized countries, have come about in large part because of:
A)evolving medical technologies.
B)a willingness to abandon older superstitions surrounding death.
C)an unwillingness to accept the death of loved ones.
D)a decline in religious beliefs.
4
Most people, as described in "Marks of Mystery," react to others' scars with:
A)revulsion.
B)pity.
C)fascination.
D)scorn.
5
The culture of honor, as stated in "Men, Honor and Murder," is a social system that encourages men to react to insults and slights:
A)by walking away.
B)by plotting revenge on the offender.
C)with violence or the threat of it.
D)by publicly humiliating the offender.
6
According to "We Are Training Our Kids to Kill," many of today's children have become desensitized to violence due to:
A)abuse at home.
B)bullying behavior witnessed in school.
C)the easy availability of guns in our society.
D)violent portrayals in the media.
7
Changes in attitudes concerning the abuses women frequently suffer in prison, as described in "Stopping Abuse in Prison," have come about as a result of all the following factors except:
A)attention from human rights groups.
B)an increase in prison violence as women retaliate against their attackers.
C)recent lawsuits filed by female prisoners.
D)changes in government policies.
8
The fastest growing segment of the computer industry, as identified in "Can Hackers Be Stopped?" is the area of:
A)creating hacking programs.
B)Internet security.
C)data storage equipment.
D)Internet commerce.
9
According to "Stolen Identity," most victims do not realize they have had their identities stolen until:
A)their property is repossessed.
B)their wages are garnished for payment.
C)they try to apply for new credit themselves.
D)their bank charges them for repeated bounced checks.
10
The root of contemporary problems with marriages and families, as presented in "The Problem With Marriage," is:
A)a lack of religion in daily life.
B)growing violence in the outside world.
C)the emphasis on gender within marriage.
D)the belief that other relationships can be equally satisfying.
11
According to "I'm O.K. You're O.K. So Who Gets the Kids?" Florida law made the custody battle between Hector and Young even more difficult because the courts:
A)always award custody to the mother.
B)grant primary custody to the parent with the largest income.
C)prefer to place the child with one primary caretaker, rather than grant joint custody.
D)were unwilling to consider allegations of longstanding abuse and neglect within the family.
12
In the Supreme Court case Loving v. Virginia, as described in "How Are We Doing with Loving?" the court ruled that:
A)the children of an interracial couple were illegitimate.
B)interracial couples must be protected against bias under Civil Rights laws.
C)the Virginia law prohibiting interracial marriage was unconstitutional.
D)states had the authority to pass laws restricting marriages as they saw fit.
13
The practice of polygamy, as described in "The Perils of Polygamy," appears to be on the rise:
A)throughout the U.S. population.
B)among Mormons.
C)within some recent immigrant populations.
D)across Europe.
14
Violence against women, as described in "The Consequences of Violence Against Women," should best be seen as a problem:
A)of low income and education.
B)best dealt with by individual families and communities.
C)that results in lasting problems primarily for the children exposed to this violence.
D)that affects society at large.
15
Lion Apparel, as reported in "An American Sweatshop," produces:
A)military uniforms.
B)swimsuits.
C)casual clothing.
D)a high priced line of designer clothing.
16
The greatest environmental concern related to the coal industry facing the Appalachian region in West Virginia, as described in "Razing Appalachia," is:
A)strip mining.
B)underground mining.
C)mountaintop removal.
D)pollution from abandoned mines.
17
After the massive recall of bacteria-contaminated beef, as described in "It's What's for Dinner," Hudson Foods' original plan for the ground meat was to:
A)dispose of it in a landfill.
B)burn it.
C)cook it and resell it for prepackaged foods.
D)sell it uncooked in overseas markets.
18
The greatest threat to high quality health care in the United States, as maintained in "What Doctors Don't Know," is the:
A)growing number of uninsured.
B)finding that scientifically-supported information on how best to care for patients is not being put into practice by doctors.
C)increasing number of lawsuits brought by people who do not believe that their managed care plans have their best interests in mind.
D)growing distrust people have in their doctors.
19
According to "Sex @ Work," sexual-harassment law is difficult to define because:
A)men view harassment differently than women.
B)the law is constantly evolving as new cases come before the court and new precedents are set.
C)what constitutes discrimination should not be based on personal relationships.
D)there is no standard measurement for what is considered harassment.
20
As cited in "Addicted," research indicates that a key factor in a wide range of addictions is:
A)brain chemistry.
B)age at first use.
C)moral weakness.
D)stress.
21
As explained in "Passion Pills," Viagra and the other vasodilators improve sexual functioning by:
A)increasing testosterone levels.
B)increasing estrogen levels.
C)eliminating genital discomfort.
D)enhancing blood flow.
22
As reported in "Crank," crank, or methamphetamine, has become so prevalent because it:
A)is very simple to make.
B)is chic.
C)is not addictive.
D)gives the same high as heroin.
23
According to "More Reefer Madness," the use of marijuana in U.S. society has given rise to:
A)mental illness among regular users.
B)insanity among policy makers.
C)increased violent crime.
D)severe public health problems.
24
As described in "Beyond Legalization: New Ideas for Ending the War on Drugs," one of the few areas of drug-policy reform where there is agreement among liberal thinkers concerns:
A)legalizing or decriminalizing drugs.
B)investing government funds in purchasing and destroying the excess drug supply.
C)reducing the overall number of arrests.
D)strengthening mandatory-minimum sentencing laws.
25
As explained in "Where'd You Learn That?" typically, adolescents today are learning about sex from all of the following sources except:
A)television.
B)movies.
C)their friends.
D)their parents.
26
The greatest factor to impact the sex trade in recent years, as identified in "The Sex Industry," has been:
A)decriminalization efforts in many countries.
B)a growing acceptance of pornography as a healthy outlet for sexual expression.
C)recent corruption scandals involving high-level politicians and prostitutes.
D)the globalization trend.
27
Almost all of the women who have written on the topic of prostitution, as described in "Who Owns Prostitution--And Why?" have agreed that:
A)prostitution should be legalized.
B)the government should take a more active role in regulating the trade.
C)sex workers should not be held criminally liable for their activities.
D)it is primarily men who are in favor of decriminalizing prostitution.
28
As described in "The Pleasure of the Pain," the essential component of sadomasochistic sexual experiences is:
A)feeling pain or restrained by bondage.
B)the loss of control felt by one of the partners.
C)the anticipation of the encounter.
D)feelings of shame and guilt after the experience.
29
Members of the "ex-gay" movement, as described in "Gay No More?" believe that homosexuality:
A)is a personal choice.
B)does not really exist.
C)is a mental disorder.
D)can be alternated with heterosexual expressions of sexuality.
30
According to "Idleness and Lawlessness in the Therapeutic State," many of the people in today's society that are idle have been diagnosed as:
A)psychotic.
B)having a learning disorder.
C)schizophrenic.
D)depressed.
31
According to "Social Anxiety," social phobia begins:
A)as anti-social behavior.
B)because of childhood abuse.
C)with genetic mutations.
D)as simple shyness.
32
One of the first barriers to treating eating disorders, as identified in "Dying to Be Thin," is getting affected people to:
A)see a physician for any reason.
B)understand the damage they are doing to their health.
C)admit that they have a problem with eating.
D)accept their natural body weight.
33
Some doctors and researchers, as reported in "The Infection Connection," now believe that minor infections can be the cause of the later development of:
A)cancer.
B)heart disease.
C)diabetes.
D)mental illness.
34
Tipper Gore, as reported in "Mental Health Reform," has helped the cause of mental health treatments by disclosing:
A)the shame she always felt about mental-health issues.
B)family histories of mental illness.
C)her own bouts of depression.
D)the treatment she is currently undergoing for anxiety.
35
According to "Where Bias Begins: The Truth About Stereotypes," stereotypes are:
A)used only by bigoted people.
B)consciously held beliefs.
C)unconsciously used by most people.
D)fairly harmless.
36
According to "Corporate Welfare," hundreds of companies are on the dole to the tune, per year, of every American's paycheck for:
A)two weeks.
B)one week.
C)one month.
D)one-and-one-half weeks.
37
Most of the decline in the welfare caseload in Missouri, as stated in "Plucking Workers," is due to:
A)job placement programs.
B)job training seminars.
C)sanctions resulting in loss of benefits.
D)family and community assistance.
38
As described in "Does Silencio = Muerte?" one of the difficult problems encountered in educating the Spanish-speaking population about the dangers of AIDS is the:
A)refusal of people to take the messages seriously.
B)lack of information in the community concerning AIDS.
C)scarcity of HIV in the Latino community.
D)scattering of this population among the English-speaking community.
39
As explained in "Hunger in America," chronic hunger in the United States most particularly affects:
A)young children.
B)the homeless.
C)recent immigrants.
D)the homebound elderly.
40
As explained in "Q. Should Juries Nullify Laws They Consider Unjust or Excessively Punitive?" jury nullification takes place when a jury:
A)finds a defendant sympathetic.
B)finds a law to be unjust.
C)rewards a defendant for his or her crime.
D)does not believe the prosecution has provided enough evidence of the defendant's guilt.
41
Most people are in favor of the death penalty, as described in "The Wrong Men on Death Row," because they believe that:
A)some criminals do not deserve to live.
B)the right person is always executed.
C)imposing the death penalty will deter future crimes.
D)executions cost the state far less than lifetime incarceration.
42
The atrocities committed by the Serbian army against the Kosovo Albanians, as maintained in "Crimes of War," appear to be part of a systematic plan because:
A)Serbian fighters have described the same conditions.
B)recent documents have been found outlining the planned abuses.
C)reports of the abuses are notably similar in their descriptions.
D)the attacks follow the patterns seen earlier in Bosnia.
43
U.S. investors, as described in "Yakuza Inc.," are now spending billions of dollars in Japan on:
A)new construction.
B)helping the government reform its financial institutions.
C)weakening the hold of organized crime.
D)portfolios of bad loans.
44
Prostitution in Thailand, as maintained in "Bitter Harvest," primarily involves:
A)European women.
B)young men.
C)young girls.
D)high-priced Thai women.
45
The best hope of halting the spread of the AIDS virus worldwide, as maintained in "Is AIDS Forever?" is likely to be:
A)a vaccine against the virus.
B)development of more effective treatments.
C)widespread education programs.
D)donations of money to developing nations to train their medical workers in diagnosing and treating AIDS.
46
The agency responsible for the return of U.S. children abducted and taken to a foreign country, as explained in "State Abandons Kidnapped Kids," is:
A)the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
B)Congress.
C)the State Department.
D)the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.







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