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democracy
democracy
A Dictionary of British History
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2004
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© A Dictionary of British History 2004, originally published by Oxford University Press 2004. (Hide copyright information)
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democracy In Britain, the transition from oligarchy to democracy was piecemeal. The civil wars and Glorious Revolution of the 17th cent. confirmed the supremacy of Parliament, but an unreformed electoral system restricted effective participation to a small minority. What public opinion existed could be expressed only spasmodically. The proliferation of newspapers in the 18th cent. and the publication of parliamentary debates after 1770 widened the scope of opinion, but not until the Great Reform Act of 1832 was the system itself substantially modified, with the introduction of a standard franchise and the grant of representation to great towns like Manchester, Birmingham, Sheffield, and Leeds. Further extension of the franchise in 1867 and 1884 gave most adult males the vote, secret ballot in 1872 reduced the influence of the gentry, and the Corrupt Practices Act of 1883 curtailed bribery. Two further reforms of 1918 and 1928 gave the vote to women, and the voting age was reduced to 18 by an act of 1969.
Democracy affords voters the opportunity to change their government, but the extent to which the opinions of ordinary people are effective in other matters remains a subject of debate, and it is arguable that specific interest groups carry more weight than the casting of a vote (often for a losing candidate) once every four or five years. In local government, where the influence of the individual might be expected to be greatest, the effect has been reduced by powerful strides towards centralized decision‐making, and by the domination of many councils by one party. Participatory democracy, accepted in principle by almost everybody, is not easy to practise in a large country, where issues are many and complex.
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Democracy or Bust?
Magazine article from: Harvard International Review; 9/22/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...happened in the 20th century is democracy." Yet today, for many developing...and Asia, the value of democracy is not quite this self-evident...Getting Results Yet critics of democracy say that in the area of economic...superior because, unlike democracies, they are not beset by constantly...
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Democracy, globalization, and the problem of the state.
Magazine article from: Polity; 6/22/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...imminent and serious threat to democracy is widespread. Impressionistic...citizens of the Western democracies nonetheless feel themselves...that globalization threatens democracy is widely shared, it has...some prominent scholars of democracy to suggest that political...
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Democracy According to Aso-Rock.
News Wire article from: Africa News Service; 1/18/2002; 700+ words
; ...period has confirmed that saying. The manner of democracy being practiced by occupants of Aso-Rock has shown...Aso-Rock is fast becoming the nemesis of our democracy. How? DEMOCRACY and dictatorship are two parallel systems. Democracy...
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Democracy And Ethnic Militia.
News Wire article from: Africa News Service; 2/26/2002; 700+ words
; Feb 21, 2002 Democracy, according to the famous...for the people." In a democracy, the government gets...difference, while in western democracies, the enemy is identified...posited that it is only in a democracy that citizens can control...
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Democracy Promotion Reconsidered.
Newspaper article from: Daily News Egypt (Egypt); 5/13/2009; 700+ words
; ...beneficial effects of democracy on security. They...studies that show that democracies rarely go to war with...show is that liberal democracies almost never go to...important, liberal democracy is more than "electocracy...Authority. And illiberal democracies have fought each other...
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Democracy and Development in Southeast Asia: The Winds of Change.
Magazine article from: Journal of Southeast Asian Studies; 3/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...The ideology of the Asian democracy is an intellectually and serious...challenge to Western liberal democracy because it appears at first...case for so-called Asian democracies. The former revolve around...the very notion of an Asian democracy seen as a contradiction in...
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DEMOCRACY REMAINS ELUSIVE IN MIDDLE EAST
Newspaper article from: Roanoke Times & World News; 3/3/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...removed, Iraq was to be made into a democracy that would serve as a model for the entire...is that we seem far away from creating democracy in Iraq. Perhaps one of the problems with instituting democracy in Iraq is that the very familiar idea...
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Democracy & Hypocrisy.(Christian-Muslim relations)
Newspaper article from: APS Diplomat News Service; 4/23/2007; 700+ words
; ...which championed the idea that Islam and democracy were compatible. Bukay claimed that...the Islamist claim that parliamentary democracy and representative elections are not...but that Islam actually encourages democracy. They do this in one of two ways: either...
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Democracy Ltd.
Magazine article from: Canadian Dimension; 3/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; If the word "democracy"--repeated over and over in the...start examining work by In the Name of Democracy, the newly formed activist research...happening here and to prevent the idea of democracy from being hijacked by people who have...
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Democracy on-line.
Magazine article from: The Futurist; 9/1/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...only the beginning of an Information Age democracy Over the last 200 years, new information...transformed the possibilities and practice of democracy. For example, the early-nineteenth...system of government. Problems with Democracy Today, it is hard to imagine that such...
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democracy
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
...tested. Contemporary democracies are all very different...one of representative democracy. Here, citizens elect...been suspicious of democracy as a dangerous and...origins of popular democracy in the French Revolution...view. In the modern democracies there is little consensus...
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Democracy
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
DEMOCRACY DEMOCRACY. In the simplest sense, democracy is rule by the ruled. In a democratic political system, government power is legitimized by the consent of the governed. Consent is expressed in a variety of forms, including annual election...
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Democracy in America
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA, by Alexis de Tocqueville. The most influential study of the United States ever written, Democracy in America owes its enduring significance to the complexity of...
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Democracy, Representative and Participatory
Encyclopedia entry from: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
Democracy, Representative and Participatory Democracy was born in the Western world in the form of participatory democracy, making the term participatory democracy redundant. The word participatory discloses the core meaning of popular sovereignty...
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Research, Democracy
Encyclopedia entry from: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
...now believe the reasons for democracy ’ s emergence are...decisive argue that third-wave democracies are fragile because democratic...privilege. Some fear that fragile democracies can be overloaded with citizen...participation is essential in democracy, and see i
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