Site MapHelpFeedbackCritical Thinking Questions
Critical Thinking Questions
(See related pages)

1. Figure 9.3 in the textbook shows claims made by various nations to Antarctica. Why do you think countries want to lay claim to a large, ice-covered wasteland?

2. How does the United State’s size, shape and location present advantages and disadvantages in the administration and organization of the country?

3. How do ministates such as Nauru, San Marino, and Djibouti survive? What are their sources of economic income? In the modern global economy, what are the drawbacks to being small? Are there advantages as well?

4. Sometimes the people of the United States seem unified and at other times deeply divided. What are the centripetal and centrifugal forces acting on the U.S. that cause this bipolar character?

5. Central and Eastern European nations have become increasingly fragmented, and less ethnically and religiously diverse, since the end of the First World War. The division of India and Pakistan, and of Singapore from Malaysia, as well as the recent genocides in Rwanda and Darfur, indicate a similar rejection of diversity elsewhere in the world. How do you account for the increasing disinclination of people to live in the same state with others sometimes only slightly different from themselves?

6. Organizations such as the European Union and NAFTA have attempted to overcome national divisions through free trade. Do you think these forces for economic unity will overcome ethnic, linguistic and religious differences in shaping the world of the twenty-first century?

7. Nearly every state in the United States recently underwent redistricting following the 2000 census. Was the process in your state controversial or politically motivated? If so, why and how?








Getis 11eOnline Learning Center

Home > Chapter 9 > Critical Thinking Questions