Government
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A government is an organization that has the power to make and enforce laws for a certain territory. There are several definitions on what exactly constitutes a government. In its broadest sense, "govern" means the power to administrate, whether over an area of land, a set group of people, or an association.
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Definitions
One approach is to define government as the dominant decision-making arm of the state. Government (uncountable) can also be defined as the political means of creating and enforcing laws; typically via a bureaucratic hierarchy. Under this definition, a purely despotic organization which controls a territory without defining laws would not be considered a government.
Another alternative is to define a government as an organisation that attempts to maintain control of a territory, where "control" involves activities such as collecting taxes, controlling entry and exit to the state, preventing encroachment of territory by neighbouring states and preventing the establishment of alternative governments within the country.
In British English, the word "Government" can also be used to refer only to the executive branch, in this context being a synonym for the word "administration" in American English (e.g. the Blair Government, the Bush Administration). In countries using the Westminster system the Government (or party in Government) will also usually control the legislature. The French use of the word gouvernement covers both meanings, whereas Canadian French also generally uses it to mean the executive branch. The German word Regierung refers only to government as the executive branch; the wider meaning of the word, government as a system, can be translated as Staatsgewalt.
Forms of Government
Main article: Form of government
Various forms of government have been implemented. A government in a developed state is likely to have various sub-organisations known as offices, departments, or agencies, which are headed by politically appointed officials, often called ministers or secretaries. Ministers may in theory act as advisors to the head of state, but in practice have a certain amount of direct power in specific areas. In most modern democracies, the elected legislative assembly has the power to dismiss the government, though the head of state generally has great latitude in appointing a new one.
Operations
Main article: government operations
Governments concern themselves with overseeing and administering many areas of human activity, such as economics, education, health, science, and war.
Enforcement of power
Governments use a variety of methods to maintain the established order, such as police and military forces, (particularly under despotism, see also police state), making agreements with other states, and maintaining support within the state. Typical methods of maintaining support and legitimacy include providing infrastructure for justice, administration, transport, social welfare etc., claiming support of deities, providing benefits to influential groups, holding elections for important posts within the state, limiting the power of the state through laws and constitutions and appealing to nationalism. Different political ideologies hold different ideas on what the government should or should not do.
Territory
The modern standard unit of territory is a country. In addition to the meaning used above, the word state can refer either to a government or to its territory. Within a territory, subnational entities may have local governments which do not have the full power of a national government (for example, they will generally lack the authority to declare war or carry out diplomatic negotiations).
Scale of Government
Main article: government ownership, government spending
The scale to which government should exist and operate in the world is a matter of debate. Government spending in developed country varies considerally but generally makes up between about 30% and 70% of GDP.
Distribution
In 1995, 73 of the world's 192 sovereign states were liberal democracies and 72 were emergent democracies, 13 had authoritarian nationalist regimes, 12 absolutist, 8 nationalistic-socialist, 7 military, 5 communist, and 2 Islamic-nationalist.
See also
More information can also be found at Politics.
Uniteed Sates Government
Federal Government of the United States
Politics (general)
General
- Politics - Political science - Political history - Political scientist - Political scientists - Comparative politics - International politics - Political economy - Political psychology
- Political theory - Forms of state - Sovereignty - Consent of the governed - Theories of Political Behavior
Political systems/forms of government
- Absolute monarchy - Anarchism - Aristocracy - Autocracy - Democracy - Despotism - Dictatorship - Monarchy - Ochlocracy - Oligarchy - Panarchy - Plutocracy - Technocracy - Theocracy -Tyranny - See further: Forms of government
Political theorists
Classical political theorists
- Plato - Aristotle - Thucydides - Cicero - Saint Augustine - Thomas Aquinas
Modern political theorists
- Niccolchiavelli - John Calvin - Martin Luther - Baruch Spinoza - Jean Bodin - Thomas Hobbes - John Locke - David Hume - Adam Smith - Jeremy Bentham - the Federalist Papers - Jean-Jacques Rousseau - Immanuel Kant - [[Emmanuel Joseph Siey賝] - G.W.F. Hegel - Johann Gottfried von Herder - Alexis de Tocqueville - John Stuart Mill - Karl Marx - Friedrich Engels - Max Weber - Lenin
Contemporary political theorists
- David Friedman - Noam Chomsky - John Rawls - Jan Narveson - David Gauthier - Amartya Sen - J?Habermas - James M. Buchanan - Bernard Crick - Michel Foucault - Jane Jacobs - Carol Moore - Antonio Negri - Robert Nozick - Hannah Arendt - Mohandas Gandhi - Ayn Rand
State and government
General
- State - Government - Separation of powers
- Public administration - Comparative government
- Three powers of the State - Separation of powers
- Citizenship
Political components
- City - City-state - Confederation - Country - Empire - Federation - Nation-state - Prefecture - Principality - Province - Republic - State - World government
Democracy
- Democracy - Democracy (varieties) - Democratization - Civil society - Checks and balances - History of democracy
Direct democracy
Indirect democracy
Presidential system
Parliamentary system
- Parliamentary system - History of Parliamentarism - Parliament - Inter-Parliamentary Union - Westminster System - Parliamentary supremacy - Semi-presidential system - Coalition government - Prime minister
Alternative forms of democracy
- Anticipatory democracy - Bioregional democracy - Consensus democracy - Deliberative democracy - Demarchy - E-democracy - Geniocracy - Gerontocracy - Grassroots democracy - Meritocracy - Non-partisan democracy - Participatory democracy - Semi-direct democracy - Sortition - Totalitarian democracy
Election
Election and Electoral systems
- Election - Psephology - Electoral system - Condorcet method - Criticisms of electoralism - General election - By-election - Additional Member System - Fixed-term election - First Past the Post electoral system - Indirect election - Mixed member proportional voting - Party-list proportional representation - Pluralism - Proportional representation - Single non-transferable vote - Single Transferable Vote
Election results
Voting and counting systems
- Vote counting systems - Voting system - Alternative vote top-up - Approval voting - Borda count - Bucklin voting - Cloneproof Schwartz Sequential Dropping - Closed list - Condorcet method - Coombs' method - Copeland's method - D'Hondt method - Droop quota - Election threshold - Hamilton method - Highest averages method - Instant-runoff voting - Largest remainder method - Preferential voting - Proportional approval voting - Range voting - Sainte-Lagu렭ethod
Miscellaneous on elections
- Absolute majority - Anti-incumbency - Ballot - Bloc voting - Canvassing - Compulsory voting - Constituent - Constituency - Cumulative voting - Double majority - Duverger's law - Elector - Elective rights - Electoral college - Electoral fusion - Electorate - Electronic voting - Exit poll - Gallagher Index - Gerrymander - Incumbent - Independence of irrelevant alternatives - Majority rule - Marginal seat - Open list - Overhang seat - Parallel voting - Plurality - Polling station - Postal voting - Primary election - Protest vote - Push poll - Qualified Majority Voting - Recall election - Secret ballot - Simple majority - Sortition - Split vote - Spoiler effect - Strategic nomination - Suffrage - Suffragette - Supermajority - Tactical voting - Two-thirds majority - Underhang seat - Universal suffrage - Vote - Vote swapping - Vote-rigging - Voter turnout - Voting machine - Voting rights - Women's suffrage
Campaigning
- Campaign finance - Campaign finance reform - Campaign management tools - Canvassing - Election promise - Get out the vote - Negative campaigning - Political campaign - Political platform
Political parties
- Party system - Political spectrum - Political party - Multi-party system - Two-party system - Single-party state - Dominant-party system - Political parties by country - Political parties by name
Politicians
- Politician - Head of State - Head of Government - List of national leaders
- President - Prime Minister - Premier - Minister - Governor - Mayor
- Member of Parliament - Senator - Congressman - Councillor
Politics by country
- General information on countries: List of sovereign states - List of dependent territories
- History: History by country
- Politics: Politics by country - List of national leaders
- Elections: Elections by country - Table of voting systems by nation - List of national legislatures
- Political parties: Political parties by country
E-democracy
- E-democracy - Emergent democracy - Internet democracy - Online consultation - Open source government