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Which theory explains it - judgement grid

Pick + or - first, then see if you were right. Tap a revealed cell for the full detail.
Predictions: 0 of 0 right
Progress0 of 36 revealed
What the exam asks for. Edexcel examines two theories of global politics: realism and liberalism. Master these two for the 12-mark Q2 and every 30-mark essay. The English School and constructivism are wider perspectives: they sit between realism and liberalism and can lift a top answer, but the board does not require them. Learn the two core theories first.
Grid complete - now write a paragraph judging which theory best explains a contemporary case. Detailed notes Walk-through
+ green = a point FOR − red = a point AGAINST The colours are the judgement, not your score. Your right and wrong shows as a tick or cross when you predict.
Decide first, then tap: does this theory strongly explain the issue (+) or not (-)? Tap a column header to see what it asks. A tick or cross tells you if your prediction was right. Tap any heading or revealed cell (look for the blue ⓘ) for the full explanation.

Test what the grid has taught you

15 questions · the grid hides while you test yourself
Fifteen questions, all from the grid
The grid is hidden while you test yourself. Close this box when you are done to bring it back.
Question 1 of 0
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Where to go next

📖Detailed notesThe four traditions in collapsible cards, with the Ukraine readings and the exam move. 📜Walk-throughThe full narrative lesson on realism, liberalism, the English School and constructivism, tested on Ukraine. 📊Theories on six claims gridThe companion grid: each theory scored against its own core claims and tenets. 🧩Key conceptsTap-to-reveal definitions of the theories, thinkers and supporting terms. 🃏FlashcardsQuick recall of the traditions, key thinkers and the Ukraine application.