AP German Unit 6 (Global Challenges): Sprache, Kultur und Argumentation sicher beherrschen

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25 Terms

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Environmental issues

Problems that arise when human activities (or natural processes) affect air, water, soil, climate, and ecosystems in ways that harm health, quality of life, and biodiversity.

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D-A-CH

Abbreviation for the German-speaking region: Germany (D), Austria (A), and Switzerland (CH).

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Climate

Long-term patterns and trends in weather over many years; not determined by single events.

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Weather

Short-term atmospheric conditions (e.g., today or this week), which can vary even as climate changes long-term.

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Energy transition (Energiewende)

Restructuring an energy system—typically moving away from fossil fuels toward renewables, higher efficiency, and updated grids and storage.

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Renewable energy

Energy from sources that are replenished naturally, such as wind, solar, and hydropower.

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Electric grid (power grid)

The network that transports and balances electricity; often needs upgrades for stability and regional differences during an energy transition.

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Energy storage

Technologies that store energy for later use (e.g., batteries, pumped storage) to help balance fluctuating renewable supply.

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Demand-side management (load management)

Adjusting when and how much energy is used to increase flexibility and reduce strain on the energy system.

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Energy efficiency

Using less energy to achieve the same output (e.g., insulation, efficient devices, improved industrial processes).

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Trade-off (goal conflict)

A situation where pursuing one objective creates tension with another (e.g., energy security vs. emissions reduction vs. affordability).

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Resource scarcity

When raw materials are limited or their extraction/processing has high ecological and social costs.

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Linear economy

A “take → produce → use → throw away” model of production and consumption.

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Circular economy

An economic model that designs products to last and emphasizes repair, reuse, and recycling to reduce waste and resource use.

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Deposit-return system (Pfand system)

A system that adds a refundable deposit to containers to incentivize returning them and increasing recycling/reuse.

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Waste separation

Sorting trash into categories to enable more effective recycling and proper disposal.

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Biodiversity

The diversity of species, genes, and ecosystems; important for stable ecosystem services like pollination, soil quality, and water balance.

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Habitat sealing (land sealing)

Covering soil with buildings/roads, reducing natural habitats and harming biodiversity.

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Monoculture

Large-scale cultivation of a single crop, which can reduce biodiversity and increase ecosystem vulnerability.

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Invasive species

Non-native species that spread and disrupt local ecosystems, often contributing to biodiversity decline.

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Policy instruments

Government tools to shape behavior and outcomes, such as promoting, regulating, subsidizing, or banning certain actions.

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Parliamentary democracy

A democratic system where a parliament is central to governance and the executive typically depends on parliamentary support.

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Rule of law (Rechtsstaat)

Principle that government action is bound by laws and fundamental rights, with courts ensuring rules are followed.

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Federalism

Distribution of power between national and regional levels (e.g., Germany’s federal government and its 16 states), which can create variety but slow decisions.

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Welfare state (Sozialstaat)

A state role focused on cushioning social risks (illness, unemployment, old age) and supporting participation through financed benefits and infrastructure.

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