Notes - Fundamentals of Political Science
Notes - Fundamentals of Political Science
Notes - Fundamentals of Political Science
- Aristotle
TYPES OF GOVERNMENT
Monarchy
- a political system based upon the undivided sovereignty or rule of a single person. The
term applies to states in which supreme authority is vested in the monarch, an individual
ruler who functions as the head of state and who achieves his or her position through
heredity. Most monarchies allow only male succession, usually from father to son.
● absolute
- Absolute Monarchy was a Government with a sovereign leader who came into
power by marriage or offspring; they had complete control with no limitations
from constitution or law. They were considered the head of state and head of
Government.
- Which countries have absolute monarchies? In Vatican City, Brunei, Swaziland,
Saudi Arabia and Oman absolute power is vested in a single person and the
monarch is the head of the state as well as the government. Qatar is also an
absolute monarchy, but the head of state and head of the government are
different persons.
● limited/constitutional
- Filters. A government in which a monarch agrees to share power with a
parliament and abide by a constitution; also known as a constitutional monarchy.
- A ceremonial monarchy is a limited monarchy that's practiced in the United
Kingdom and Japan. Both countries have a prime minister that's the head of the
executive branch of government, leaving the Queen and Emperor, respectively,
as public figureheads.
Authoritarian
- Authoritarianism is a form of government characterized by the rejection of political
plurality, the use of a strong central power to preserve the political status quo, and
reductions in the rule of law, separation of powers, and democratic voting.
- A government who is more concerned with having people obey laws than in people
having some freedom is an example of an authoritarian government. The definition of an
authoritarian is a person who expects everyone to do what he says to do. A dictator is an
example of an authoritarian.
Aristocracy
- Aristocracy is a form of government that places strength in the hands of a small,
privileged ruling class, the aristocrats. The term derives from the Greek aristokratia,
meaning 'rule of the best'.
Oligarchy
- Oligarchy is a form of power structure in which power rests with a small number of
people. These people may or may not be distinguished by one or several characteristics,
such as nobility, fame, wealth, education, or corporate, religious, political, or military
control.
Democracy
With great power comes great responsibility.
- Voltaire
Man, by nature, is a political animal.
- Aristotle
- government in which power and civic responsibility are exercised by all adult citi- zens,
directly, or through their freely elected rep- resentatives. Democracy rests upon the
principles of majority rule and individual rights.
- The word democracy comes from the Greek words "demos", meaning people, and
"kratos" meaning power; so democracy can be thought of as "power of the people": a
way of governing which depends on the will of the people.
- There are so many different models of democratic government around the world that it is
sometimes easier to understand the idea of democracy in terms of what it definitely is
not. Democracy, then, is not autocracy or dictatorship, where one person rules; and it is
not oligarchy, where a small segment of society rules. Properly understood, democracy
should not even be "rule of the majority", if that means that minorities' interests are
ignored completely. A democracy, at least in theory, is the government on behalf of all
the people, according to their "will".
● pure/direct democracy
- forms of direct participation of citizens in democratic decision making, in contrast
to indirect or representative democracy.
● indirect/ republican/ representative democracy
- Representative democracy, also known as indirect democracy, is a type of
democracy founded on the principle of elected persons representing a group of
people, in contrast to direct democracy. Representative democracy places power
in the hands of representatives who are elected by the people.
Mobocracy
- a political system in which a mob is the source of control; government by the masses.
- ochlocracy, the members of a social organization who are in power.
Unitary
- A unitary state, or unitary government, is a governing system in which a single central
government has total power over all of its other political subdivisions. In a unitary state,
the political subdivisions must carry out the directives of the central government but have
no power to act on their own.
Federal
- A federal system of government is one that divides the powers of government between
the national (federal) government and state and local governments. The Constitution of
the United States established the federal system, also known as federalism.
Presidential
- The Philippines is a republic with a presidential form of government wherein power is
equally divided among its three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. The
government seeks to act in the best interests of its citizens through this system of check
and balance.
Parliamentary
- The parliamentary system typically has clear differentiation between the head of
government and the head of state, with the former being the Prime Minister and the
latter, the President. In the parliamentary system, there is a fusion of powers between
the executive and the legislative branches.