Chapter 1 Flashcards
Government
The formal vehicle through which policies are made and affairs of state are conducted.
Monarchy
A form of government in which power is vested in hereditary kings and queens who govern in the interests of all.
Totalitarianism
A form of government in which power resides in a leader who rules according to self-interest and whiteout regard for individual rights and liberties.
Oligarchy
A form of government in which the right to participate depends on the possession of wealth, social status, military position, or achievement.
Democracy
A system of government that gives power to the people, wether directly or through elected representatives.
Direct Democracy
A system of government in which members of the polity meet to discuss all policy decisions and then agree to abide by majority rule.
Indirect Democracy
A system of government that gives citizens the opportunity to vote for representatives who work on their behalf.
Republic
A government rooted in the consent of the governed; a representative or indirect democracy.
Political Culture
Commonly shared attitudes, beliefs, and core values about how government should operate.
Personal Liberty
A key characteristic of U.S democracy. Initially meaning freedom from governmental interference, today it includes demands for freedom to engage in a variety of practices without governmental interference or discrimination.
Political Equality
The principal that all citizens are the same in the eyes of the law.
Popular Consent
The principal that governments must draw their powers from the consent of the governed.
Majority Rule
The central premise of direct democracy in which only policies that collectively garner the support of a majority of voters will be made into law.
Popular Sovereignty
The notion that the ultimate authority in society rests with the people.
Natural Law
A doctrine that society should be governed by certain ethical principles that are part of nature and, as such, can be understood by reason.