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Forms of Governments
Forms of Governments Review
Term | Definition |
---|---|
direct | form of democracy in which people propose, debate, and vote for the rules and laws that guide their society. |
matriarchy | form of government that is entirely dominated by women. |
dictatorship | form of government that is generally upheld through violence, terror, and propaganda. |
foreigners | could never vote in Athens, could in Rome with 25 years of military service, and can be in Ecuador after 5 years in the country. |
sex | basis of power in both patriarchies and matriarchies. |
readandwrite | this was a requirement for being able to vote until 1996. |
oligarchy | a government in which a small group of people are given power on the basis of prestige. |
slaves | could not be citizens in either Athens or Rome, though Rome allowed them to become citizens if they could become freemen. |
authority | what legitimizes or confers power. |
block | type of voting used in the Roman Assemblies. |
election | most high officials in the Roman Republic got their office this way. |
electors | in the 1830 Constitution, these people were elected to elect the “Asamblea” which then elected the president and vice president. |
enablingact | the law created by the German Reichstag in which the legislature legally gave Hitler total power. |
patriarchy | form of government that is entirely dominated by men. |
lottery | the way in which many of the high officials of Athens got their office. |
voting | the basis of any form of democracy. |
sixteen | in the 2008 Ecuadorian Constitution people as young as this age were given the right to vote. |
divineright | the basis of power of most monarchical (kings and queens) governments. |
women | in the 1929 Ecuadorian Constitution, these people were given the right to vote. |
plutocracy | form of government in which a small group of people are given power on the basis of wealth. |
men | In Athens, in the Roman Republic, and in the Ecuadorian Constitution of 1830, only they had the right to citizenship. |
women | could be citizens in Rome, though they still could not vote. |
republic | type of democracy in which people vote for others to represent them in government. |
power | the ability to control, influence, or direct people or resources. |
eighteen | in the 1996 Ecuadorian Constitution the age to vote was lowered to this. |