Tag: UGC NET Political Science – Unit 1: Political Theory

  • UGC NET Political Science – Unit 1: Political Theory-MCQs

    75 MCQs with Answers & Explanations


    Section A: Meaning, Nature & Scope of Political Theory


    1. Political theory mainly deals with:
    A) Political facts
    B) Political values and ideas
    C) Political institutions only
    D) Administrative rules
    Answer: B
    📘 Political theory studies ideas, principles, and values that shape political life.


    2. Which of the following is a normative question?
    A) What is the voter turnout?
    B) Should liberty be restricted for security?
    C) How many seats are in Parliament?
    D) What is the GDP growth rate?
    Answer: B
    📘 Normative theory asks “what ought to be,” focusing on moral or value judgments.


    3. The empirical approach in political theory focuses on:
    A) Values
    B) Data and observation
    C) Ideology
    D) Moral reasoning
    Answer: B
    📘 Empirical theories are based on facts and data, not value judgments.


    4. Which statement is correct?
    A) Political theory is only descriptive.
    B) Political theory is both normative and empirical.
    C) Political theory is about administration.
    D) Political theory rejects values.
    Answer: B
    📘 Political theory includes both moral principles and scientific analysis.


    5. Who said, “Political theory is a master science”?
    A) Plato
    B) Aristotle
    C) Machiavelli
    D) Hobbes
    Answer: B
    📘 Aristotle called politics the “master science” because it organizes all others.


    Section B: Concepts


    Liberty

    6. Liberty means:
    A) Absence of law
    B) Absence of restraint with reasonable control
    C) Doing whatever one wants
    D) Power of the ruler
    Answer: B
    📘 Liberty = freedom within law, not anarchy.


    7. Positive liberty means:
    A) Freedom from interference
    B) Freedom to act or realize oneself
    C) Economic freedom only
    D) Political freedom only
    Answer: B
    📘 Positive liberty = freedom to achieve self-development.


    8. The idea of “negative liberty” is linked with:
    A) Marx
    B) Isaiah Berlin
    C) Rousseau
    D) Gandhi
    Answer: B
    📘 Berlin distinguished between positive and negative liberty in his essay (1958).


    9. “Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign.” –
    A) Hobbes
    B) Locke
    C) J.S. Mill
    D) Rousseau
    Answer: C
    📘 J.S. Mill in On Liberty (1859) defended individual freedom and limited state control.


    Equality

    10. Equality means:
    A) Same income for all
    B) Absence of privilege and discrimination
    C) Uniformity
    D) Economic parity only
    Answer: B
    📘 Equality ensures fairness and equal opportunities, not identical outcomes.


    11. “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs” was stated by:
    A) Lenin
    B) Marx
    C) Engels
    D) Owen
    Answer: B
    📘 Marx’s principle of economic equality and communism.


    12. Political equality means:
    A) Equal property
    B) Equal political rights like vote
    C) Equal wealth
    D) Equal income
    Answer: B
    📘 Equal right to vote, contest elections, and hold office.


    Justice

    13. Justice primarily means:
    A) Punishment
    B) Fairness
    C) Rule of law
    D) Equality of income
    Answer: B
    📘 Justice = fair and just distribution of resources and opportunities.


    14. John Rawls defines justice as:
    A) Fairness
    B) Freedom
    C) Discipline
    D) Efficiency
    Answer: A
    📘 Rawls’ A Theory of Justice = justice as fairness.


    15. Rawls’ “difference principle” allows inequality only when:
    A) It benefits the least advantaged
    B) It helps the rich
    C) It ensures economic growth
    D) It increases taxation
    Answer: A
    📘 Inequality is justifiable only if it improves the position of the poorest.


    Rights

    16. Rights are:
    A) Moral claims not recognized by state
    B) Demands recognized and enforced by society/state
    C) Only legal claims
    D) Privileges of rulers
    Answer: B
    📘 Rights are legally and morally justified claims.


    17. Who said, “Rights are conditions necessary for the development of personality”?
    A) Laski
    B) Marx
    C) Locke
    D) Bentham
    Answer: A
    📘 Laski emphasized social rights for personal development.


    18. Natural rights theory was given by:
    A) Hobbes
    B) Locke
    C) Rousseau
    D) Burke
    Answer: B
    📘 Locke: rights to life, liberty, and property are natural and inalienable.


    Democracy

    19. “Government of the people, by the people, for the people” –
    A) Lincoln
    B) Aristotle
    C) Rousseau
    D) Mill
    Answer: A
    📘 Classic definition of representative democracy by Abraham Lincoln.


    20. Democracy’s key element is:
    A) Monarchy
    B) Rule of Law and Participation
    C) Bureaucracy
    D) Elitism
    Answer: B
    📘 Democracy is based on rule of law, equality, and participation.


    Power

    21. Power means:
    A) Physical strength
    B) Ability to influence others
    C) Authority only
    D) Money
    Answer: B
    📘 Power = capacity to influence or control behavior.


    22. Max Weber defined power as:
    A) The monopoly of violence
    B) Ability to achieve one’s will despite resistance
    C) Legitimate authority
    D) Institutional control
    Answer: B
    📘 Weber’s famous definition from Economy and Society.


    23. Steven Lukes’ third dimension of power is:
    A) Decision-making
    B) Agenda-setting
    C) Manipulating beliefs and preferences
    D) Legal control
    Answer: C
    📘 Power also works through controlling ideas and perceptions.


    Citizenship

    24. Citizenship means:
    A) Living in a country
    B) Legal and political membership of a state
    C) Birthplace identity
    D) Voter ID
    Answer: B
    📘 Citizenship = membership with rights and duties.


    25. The concept of “global citizenship” emphasizes:
    A) National loyalty
    B) Rights of only citizens
    C) Universal human rights
    D) Corporate identity
    Answer: C
    📘 Global citizenship = rights beyond borders.


    Section C: Political Traditions / Ideologies


    Liberalism

    26. Liberalism primarily emphasizes:
    A) Authority
    B) Individual liberty
    C) Equality only
    D) Class struggle
    Answer: B
    📘 Liberalism = freedom and limited state power.


    27. The father of classical liberalism is:
    A) Marx
    B) Locke
    C) Mill
    D) Hobbes
    Answer: B
    📘 Locke → natural rights & limited government.


    28. Modern liberalism supports:
    A) Laissez-faire economy
    B) Welfare state
    C) Monarchy
    D) Military rule
    Answer: B
    📘 Modern liberals emphasize state intervention for social welfare.


    Conservatism

    29. Conservatism stresses:
    A) Radical change
    B) Revolution
    C) Tradition and gradual reform
    D) Anarchy
    Answer: C
    📘 Burke → “Change must preserve continuity.”


    30. Edmund Burke opposed:
    A) French Revolution
    B) Industrial Revolution
    C) Reformation
    D) American Revolution
    Answer: A
    📘 Burke saw the French Revolution as chaotic destruction of tradition.


    Socialism

    31. Socialism seeks:
    A) Private property
    B) Equality and cooperation
    C) Market competition
    D) Inequality
    Answer: B
    📘 Core of socialism = collective welfare.


    32. Democratic socialism emphasizes:
    A) Revolution
    B) Violence
    C) Gradual reform within democracy
    D) Dictatorship
    Answer: C
    📘 Achieve socialist aims peacefully through democracy.


    Marxism

    33. Marx considered history as:
    A) Struggle between good and evil
    B) Class struggle
    C) Cultural conflict
    D) Economic competition only
    Answer: B
    📘 “History of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.”


    34. The base in Marxism refers to:
    A) Ideology
    B) Economic structure
    C) Political system
    D) Religion
    Answer: B
    📘 Base (economy) determines the superstructure (law, politics, culture).


    35. Alienation refers to:
    A) Political disinterest
    B) Separation of worker from product and self
    C) Religious freedom
    D) Class unity
    Answer: B
    📘 Alienation occurs when workers lose control over their work and creativity.


    36. Marx predicted the ultimate stage of society as:
    A) Capitalism
    B) Communism
    C) Feudalism
    D) Democracy
    Answer: B
    📘 Classless, stateless, communist society → Marx’s end goal.


    Feminism

    37. Feminism seeks:
    A) Women superiority
    B) Gender equality
    C) Abolition of marriage
    D) Patriarchy
    Answer: B
    📘 Feminism = equal rights and representation.


    38. “The personal is political” relates to:
    A) Liberal feminism
    B) Radical feminism
    C) Socialist feminism
    D) Postmodern feminism
    Answer: B
    📘 Radical feminists argue private life also reflects patriarchal power.


    39. The book The Second Sex was written by:
    A) Mary Wollstonecraft
    B) Simone de Beauvoir
    C) Betty Friedan
    D) Germaine Greer
    Answer: B
    📘 Seminal work in feminist theory.


    Ecologism

    40. Ecologism focuses on:
    A) Industrial growth
    B) Environmental balance
    C) Capitalist development
    D) Urbanization
    Answer: B
    📘 Emphasizes sustainability and harmony with nature.


    41. Deep ecology was propounded by:
    A) Vandana Shiva
    B) Arne Naess
    C) Foucault
    D) Kymlicka
    Answer: B
    📘 Arne Naess → deep respect for intrinsic value of nature.


    Multiculturalism

    42. Multiculturalism supports:
    A) Uniform culture
    B) Cultural diversity and group rights
    C) Assimilation
    D) Racial superiority
    Answer: B
    📘 Promotes recognition of cultural pluralism.


    43. Will Kymlicka is associated with:
    A) Marxism
    B) Multiculturalism
    C) Feminism
    D) Conservatism
    Answer: B
    📘 Kymlicka wrote Multicultural Citizenship.


    Postmodernism

    44. Postmodernism rejects:
    A) Diversity
    B) Grand universal theories
    C) Pluralism
    D) Language
    Answer: B
    📘 Postmodernists deny universal truths or metanarratives.


    45. Which thinker is linked to postmodernism?
    A) Foucault
    B) Marx
    C) Rawls
    D) Locke
    Answer: A
    📘 Foucault emphasized power-knowledge relationship.


    Section D: Thinkers & Comparative Ideas


    46. Locke justified revolution against:
    A) Tyranny
    B) Democracy
    C) Capitalism
    D) Religion
    Answer: A

    47. Hobbes’ state of nature was:
    A) Peaceful
    B) State of war
    C) Cooperative
    D) Harmonious
    Answer: B
    📘 Hobbes: life was “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.”


    48. Rousseau’s social contract aimed at:
    A) Private property protection
    B) General will
    C) Dictatorship
    D) Religious law
    Answer: B
    📘 Sovereignty lies with the general will (collective good).


    49. Bentham is known for:
    A) Rights theory
    B) Utilitarianism
    C) Idealism
    D) Marxism
    Answer: B
    📘 “Greatest happiness of the greatest number.”


    50. For Plato, justice means:
    A) Equality of income
    B) Doing one’s own duty
    C) Freedom of expression
    D) Voting rights
    Answer: B
    📘 Justice = harmony; each class performing its proper role.


    51. Aristotle considered man as:
    A) Economic animal
    B) Political animal
    C) Religious animal
    D) Moral animal
    Answer: B
    📘 “Man is by nature a political animal.”


    52. Marx’s classless society =
    A) Stateless and propertyless society
    B) Dictatorship
    C) Welfare state
    D) Oligarchy
    Answer: A
    📘 Communism abolishes state and class distinctions.


    53. Machiavelli is often considered the father of:
    A) Modern political philosophy
    B) Liberalism
    C) Marxism
    D) Idealism
    Answer: A
    📘 He separated politics from morality.


    54. Hannah Arendt is known for her analysis of:
    A) Feminism
    B) Totalitarianism
    C) Capitalism
    D) Socialism
    Answer: B
    📘 Her book The Origins of Totalitarianism.


    55. Who emphasized “citizenship and civic virtue”?
    A) Machiavelli
    B) Hobbes
    C) Mill
    D) Rawls
    Answer: A
    📘 Republican tradition → active civic participation.

    Section E: Miscellaneous & Modern Applications


    56. Who defined democracy as “competitive elitism”?
    A) Schumpeter
    B) Dahl
    C) Rawls
    D) Mill
    Answer: A


    57. The concept of “power elite” was introduced by:
    A) Karl Marx
    B) C. Wright Mills
    C) Weber
    D) Foucault
    Answer: B


    58. Political obligation refers to:
    A) Paying taxes
    B) Obedience to laws of the state
    C) Joining parties
    D) Electing leaders
    Answer: B


    59. The theory of “justice as fairness” was given by:
    A) Marx
    B) Rawls
    C) Mill
    D) Nozick
    Answer: B


    60. Nozick’s Anarchy, State and Utopia supports:
    A) Minimal state
    B) Welfare state
    C) Communism
    D) Dictatorship
    Answer: A


    61. “Social contract” theory unites:
    A) Locke, Hobbes, Rousseau
    B) Marx, Engels, Lenin
    C) Mill, Bentham, Rawls
    D) Aristotle, Plato, Burke
    Answer: A


    62. The feminist slogan “equal pay for equal work” is part of:
    A) Radical feminism
    B) Liberal feminism
    C) Socialist feminism
    D) Ecofeminism
    Answer: B


    63. The notion that environment and humans are interdependent belongs to:
    A) Ecologism
    B) Feminism
    C) Marxism
    D) Realism
    Answer: A


    64. The idea of participatory democracy emphasizes:
    A) Voting only
    B) Active citizen involvement in decision-making
    C) Party loyalty
    D) Economic growth
    Answer: B


    65. Which thinker linked democracy and development as “freedom”?
    A) Rawls
    B) Sen
    C) Marx
    D) Mill
    Answer: B
    📘 Amartya Sen → “Development as Freedom.”


    66. “Man is born free, but everywhere he is in chains.” –
    A) Rousseau
    B) Marx
    C) Mill
    D) Hobbes
    Answer: A


    67. Feminist political theory critiques:
    A) Capitalism
    B) Patriarchy
    C) Democracy
    D) Globalization
    Answer: B


    68. According to Marx, the state is an instrument of:
    A) Justice
    B) Ruling class domination
    C) Equality
    D) Freedom
    Answer: B


    69. The “end of ideology” thesis was advanced by:
    A) Daniel Bell
    B) Marx
    C) Nozick
    D) Arendt
    Answer: A


    70. “End of History” thesis (liberal democracy as final stage) –
    A) Rawls
    B) Fukuyama
    C) Huntington
    D) Marx
    Answer: B


    71. Postmodernists believe knowledge is:
    A) Absolute
    B) Relative and socially constructed
    C) Scientific only
    D) Divine
    Answer: B

    72. Deliberative democracy emphasizes:
    A) Electoral competition only
    B) Deliberation and reasoned discussion among citizens
    C) Rule by experts
    D) Centralized authority
    Answer: B
    📘 Explanation: Deliberative democracy (Habermas, Cohen, Rawls’ later work) stresses public reasoning and discussion as central to legitimate democratic decisions.


    73. A Vindication of the Rights of Woman was written by:
    A) Simone de Beauvoir
    B) Betty Friedan
    C) Mary Wollstonecraft
    D) Gloria Steinem
    Answer: C
    📘 Explanation: Mary Wollstonecraft (1792) is an early feminist classic arguing for women’s education and equal rights.


    74. Civic republicanism primarily emphasizes:
    A) Individual economic rights
    B) Civic virtue, public-spiritedness, and active participation
    C) Market freedom
    D) Elimination of the public sphere
    Answer: B
    📘 Explanation: Civic republican tradition (Aristotle → Machiavelli → contemporary republicans) focuses on citizen engagement, civic virtue, and freedom as non-domination.


    75. The doctrine that highlights separation of powers and the rule of law was famously advanced by:
    A) Hobbes
    B) Rousseau
    C) Montesquieu
    D) Marx
    Answer: C
    📘 Explanation: Montesquieu (The Spirit of the Laws) argued for separation of powers (legislative, executive, judicial) to prevent tyranny and uphold the rule of law.

  • UGC NET Political Science – Unit 1: Political Theory

    I. Meaning and Scope of Political Theory

    🔹 Meaning:

    Political theory is the systematic study of ideas and values related to political life — power, justice, liberty, equality, rights, and democracy.

    It asks:

    • What is the best form of government?

    • How should power be distributed?

    • What makes a society just and fair?

    🔹 Nature:

    Political theory is both normative (what ought to be) and empirical (what actually is).

    🔹 Scope:

    1. Conceptual Analysis – understanding political ideas (liberty, equality, justice, etc.)

    2. Normative Theory – setting standards for political life.

    3. Empirical Study – analyzing institutions and behavior scientifically.

    4. Critique and Change – guiding reform and social transformation.


    🧠 II. Key Political Concepts


    1. Liberty (Freedom)

    Meaning:
    Liberty means the absence of restraint and the opportunity to act according to one’s own will within social limits.

    Types:

    • Positive Liberty: Freedom to do something (self-realization, collective good).

    • Negative Liberty: Freedom from external interference (individual rights).

    Thinkers:

    • Isaiah Berlin: Differentiated between positive and negative liberty.

    • J.S. Mill: Advocated liberty of thought, expression, and action (limited by “harm principle”).


    2. Equality

    Meaning:
    Equality means removal of privileges and discriminations; ensuring equal rights and opportunities.

    Forms:

    1. Political Equality – one person, one vote.

    2. Social Equality – no caste, class, gender discrimination.

    3. Economic Equality – fair distribution of wealth.

    4. Legal Equality – equal protection of laws.

    Key Idea:
    Equality does not mean uniformity; it means fairness in opportunity.


    3. Justice

    Meaning:
    Justice is the moral ideal that ensures fairness in social, economic, and political relations.

    Types:

    1. Distributive Justice – fair distribution of resources.

    2. Procedural Justice – fairness in processes and laws.

    3. Social Justice – ending oppression and inequalities.

    Thinker:

    • John Rawls: A Theory of Justice → Justice as fairness, based on equality of opportunity and difference principle.


    4. Rights

    Meaning:
    Rights are claims recognized by society as essential for individual development.

    Types:

    • Natural Rights – inherent (life, liberty, property – Locke).

    • Legal Rights – given by state laws.

    • Moral Rights – based on ethics.

    Key Idea:
    Rights and duties are interdependent; no right without responsibility.


    5. Democracy

    Meaning:
    Government “of the people, by the people, for the people.” – Abraham Lincoln

    Types:

    • Direct Democracy: Citizens directly participate (ancient Athens).

    • Representative Democracy: Elected representatives act on behalf.

    Core Values:

    • Political equality

    • Participation

    • Rule of law

    • Accountability

    • Tolerance

    Modern View:
    Democracy is not only political but also social and economic participation (Amartya Sen’s idea of development as freedom).


    6. Power

    Meaning:
    Power is the ability to influence others’ behavior to achieve desired outcomes.

    Forms (Lukes’ three dimensions):

    1. Decision-making power

    2. Agenda-setting power

    3. Ideological power (shaping beliefs)

    Types of Power:

    • Coercive (force)

    • Economic

    • Political

    • Ideological

    Thinkers: Max Weber (power and authority), Michel Foucault (power is diffused, present in all relationships).


    7. Citizenship

    Meaning:
    Membership in a political community with rights and duties.

    Types:

    • Liberal Citizenship: Focus on rights and individual freedom.

    • Republican Citizenship: Emphasizes civic duty and participation.

    • Global Citizenship: Beyond national boundaries — universal human rights.

    Modern Issues:
    Dual citizenship, migration, cultural pluralism, refugees, gender inclusivity.


    🌍 III. Major Political Traditions / Ideologies


    1. Liberalism

    Core Ideas:

    • Individual freedom and equality before law

    • Limited government

    • Private property and free market

    Thinkers: John Locke, J.S. Mill, Adam Smith

    Types:

    • Classical Liberalism: Minimum state interference.

    • Modern Liberalism: State ensures welfare and equality of opportunity.


    2. Conservatism

    Core Ideas:

    • Value of tradition and gradual change

    • Importance of family, religion, authority

    • Skeptical of radical reforms

    Thinkers: Edmund Burke, Michael Oakeshott

    Quote: “A state without the means of change is without the means of its conservation.” – Burke


    3. Socialism

    Core Ideas:

    • Cooperation over competition

    • Economic equality

    • Collective ownership of means of production

    Types:

    • Democratic Socialism

    • Revolutionary Socialism

    Thinkers: Karl Marx, Robert Owen, Bernstein


    4. Marxism

    Core Ideas:

    • Economic structure shapes politics

    • Class struggle is the motor of history

    • Goal: classless, stateless society

    Key Concepts:
    Base & superstructure, surplus value, alienation, proletarian revolution.

    Thinkers: Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels (Communist Manifesto).


    5. Feminism

    Core Ideas:

    • Gender equality and women’s empowerment

    • Critique of patriarchy

    • Equal representation and opportunity

    Types:

    • Liberal Feminism (equal rights)

    • Radical Feminism (overthrow patriarchy)

    • Socialist Feminism (links gender & class)

    • Ecofeminism (links oppression of women and nature)


    6. Ecologism

    Core Ideas:

    • Protection of environment and sustainable living

    • Human life interconnected with nature

    • Criticism of industrial capitalism and consumerism

    Variants:
    Deep ecology (radical), shallow ecology (reformist).

    Thinkers: Arne Naess, Vandana Shiva.


    7. Multiculturalism

    Core Ideas:

    • Recognition and respect for cultural diversity

    • Equality among different cultural communities

    • Group rights along with individual rights

    Thinkers: Charles Taylor, Will Kymlicka.

    Focus: Managing diversity in democracy — language, religion, ethnicity.


    8. Postmodernism

    Core Ideas:

    • Rejects universal truths or grand theories

    • Knowledge and truth are socially constructed

    • Emphasizes difference, pluralism, and identity

    Thinkers: Michel Foucault, Lyotard, Derrida

    Implication: Challenges Enlightenment ideals and traditional political ideologies.


    📚 IV. Summary Table

    Concept Key Idea Key Thinkers
    Liberty Freedom to act without restraint J.S. Mill, Isaiah Berlin
    Equality Fairness in opportunities Rousseau, Marx
    Justice Fair distribution and process John Rawls
    Rights Claims protected by law Locke, Bentham
    Democracy Rule by the people Lincoln, Dahl
    Power Influence over others Weber, Foucault
    Citizenship Membership with rights/duties T.H. Marshall
    Liberalism Individual freedom Locke, Mill
    Conservatism Value of tradition Burke
    Socialism Social ownership Marx, Owen
    Marxism Class struggle Marx, Engels
    Feminism Gender equality Wollstonecraft, Beauvoir
    Ecologism Human-nature harmony Naess, Shiva
    Multiculturalism Cultural diversity Kymlicka, Taylor
    Postmodernism Rejection of absolute truths Foucault, Lyotard