Three strands (Liberal / Pluralist / Cosmopolitan). Edexcel thinkers include Kymlicka, Parekh, Modood, Taylor.
How this works. 12 multiple-choice questions on the named evidence, key concepts and analytical lines for this question. Select one answer per question, then Submit to mark.
Q1
Who is associated with liberal multiculturalism?
AParekh
BKymlicka
CModood
DAppiah
Explanation. Will Kymlicka. Multicultural Citizenship (1995). Liberal multiculturalism: state neutrality + individual rights + group rights instrumental to autonomy.
Q2
Who wrote Rethinking Multiculturalism (2000)?
AModood
BParekh
CTaylor
DKymlicka
Explanation. Bhikhu Parekh. Argues no culture is self-sufficient; inter-cultural dialogue is foundational.
Q3
What is Kymlicka's central claim?
AGroup rights are absolute
BGroup rights are instrumental to individual autonomy
CIdentity is fixed
DCultures should compete
Explanation. Group rights are instrumental — they secure the cultural context that makes individual autonomy meaningful.
Q4
Which thinker emphasises British Muslim religious identity?
AKymlicka
BModood
CAppiah
DCameron
Explanation. Tariq Modood. Religious dimension of multicultural politics; not just ethnic recognition.
Q5
What did Cameron's 2011 Munich speech argue?
AMulticulturalism succeeded
BState multiculturalism had failed; need 'muscular liberalism'
CEU multiculturalism is required
DGroup rights are constitutional
Explanation. Cameron argued state multiculturalism tolerated segregation and called for 'muscular liberalism' — active promotion of British liberal values.
Q6
What did Merkel say about multiculturalism in 2010?
AIt had succeeded
BIt was unfinished
CMultikulti had utterly failed
DIt must continue
Explanation. Merkel said the German multicultural model had 'utterly failed' (multikulti ist gescheitert). Triggered broader European retreat from state multiculturalism.
Q7
What is Charles Taylor's politics of recognition?
AIndividual rights are sufficient
BRecognition is a fundamental human need; misrecognition is oppression
CIdentity is irrelevant
DMarkets recognise value
Explanation. Recognition is a vital human need. Misrecognition can be a form of oppression. Underpins the pluralist case for active state recognition.
Q8
Who advocated 'rooted cosmopolitanism'?
AKymlicka
BParekh
CAppiah
DModood
Explanation. Kwame Anthony Appiah. Identity rooted in particular cultures but oriented globally — hybrid, not anchored in single community.
Q9
What are Kymlicka's three types of group rights?
ACivil, political, social
BSelf-government, polyethnic, special representation
CLiberal, social, economic
DHereditary, earned, granted
Explanation. (1) Self-government (indigenous), (2) polyethnic (immigrants), (3) special representation.
Q10
Which strand wants state neutrality between cultures?
ALiberal
BPluralist
CCosmopolitan
DAll three
Explanation. Liberal multiculturalism (Kymlicka). State neutrality + individual rights protection.
Q11
Which strand wants group-differentiated rights?
ALiberal
BPluralist
CCosmopolitan
DAssimilationist
Explanation. Pluralist multiculturalism (Parekh, Modood). Group rights to recognise cultural difference and ensure substantive equality.
Q12
What is the strongest line of argument on multiculturalist agreement?
AThey agree on assimilation
BThey disagree more than they agree
CThey agree on group rights
DThey agree on state neutrality
Explanation. Foundational divides on state neutrality, group rights, and hybrid identity are deeper than the shared anti-assimilation position.