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TYPES OF GOVERNMENT. * Government by one person * Government by the few Aristocracy Oligarchy * Government by the Many = DEMOCRACY (Us). TYPES OF DEMOCRACY. 1. Direct 2. Representative. Direct democracy. People make law/policy themselves
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TYPES OF GOVERNMENT * Government by one person * Government by the few Aristocracy Oligarchy * Government by the Many = DEMOCRACY (Us)
TYPES OF DEMOCRACY • 1. Direct • 2. Representative
Direct democracy People make law/policy themselves Example: Initiative: Citizen petition places proposed law/constitutional amendment on ballot, people vote yes or no (state level – Florida)
Representative government – • We elect people to make decisions for us, trust they will make decisions we support. • Do they truly represent the citizens who elect them? Which citizens get the “most” representation? • What do we expect out of our representatives? Should they mirror their constituents’ views (be delegates) or be allowed leeway to exercise their own judgment (trustees)?
Implications of having representative gov’t (elected officials) Many countries have elections, but US is unique in 1. how its electoral system works, and 2. how elections affect the winners and the governed “Politics in US driven by electoral influences”
How are US elections unique? • Number • Frequency • Length of campaigns • “Permanent Campaign” – why does this exist?
Why is there a permanent campaign? • Separation of elections • Decline of parties (nominations) Rise of interest groups • Growth of polling • Technological advances • Cost of campaigns – constant fundraising by individual candidates, national campaign committees,
What does government do? • 1. Maintain national defense (armed forces ) - $600+ billion per year on ND • 2. Provide public goods/services (schools, libraries, highways etc.) • 3. Preserve order ( police/national guard) • 4. Socialize the young (through schools) • 5. Collect taxes to pay for #2
Where does policy come from? • “The people?” Transmit preferences to policymakers in government through “linkage institutions” (parties, elections, interest groups, media) • Citizens shape the government’s POLICY AGENDA • Main policymaking institutions: Congress, presidency, courts (& bureaucracy)
What does democracy mean? • Traditional democratic theory emphasizes certain principles: • MAJORITY RULE, but also • MINORITY RIGHTS (e.g. to freedom of speech, assembly) • REPRESENTATION (Wishes of “the people” should be “made present again”/honored/carried out by elected officials)
Modern theories of American democracy – how it works • 1. PLURALISM – Policymaking should be open to participation of all groups with no single group dominating (Dahl) • 2. ELITISM - Pluralists too optimistic/unrealistic – Upper class elite (the wealthy/big business) pulls the strings of government. (Schattschneider) • 3.
3. HYPERPLURALISM – • “pluralism gone sour” – Lots of groups out there, so many competing groups that government can’t act. Also too many ways for groups to get their way – multiple levels of government and veto points at which groups can use the political system to their advantage. The “public interest” loses out.
Challenges to democracy • Complexity of issues (can average citizen understand them? If not, what does it mean for representatives to carry out citizens’ preferences?) • Limited participation in government (especially by young people) • Rising campaign costs – money talks… • Policy gridlock (relates to hyperpluralism)