Government Systems - Week II
Government Systems - Week II
Direct Representative
Democracies Democracies
Direct Democracy
• Ancient Athens, the world's first democracy,
managed to practice direct democracy with an
assembly that may have numbered as many as
5,000 to 6,000 persons--perhaps the
maximum number that can physically gather
in one place and practice direct democracy.
Direct Democracy
• In a direct democracy, all citizens, without the
intermediary of elected or appointed officials, can
participate in making public decisions
• Such a system is clearly only practical with
relatively small numbers of people--in a
community organization or tribal council, for
example, or the local unit of a labor union, where
members can meet in a single room to discuss
issues and arrive at decisions by consensus or
majority vote.
Advantages of Direct Democracy
• Gives equal weight to all votes, unlike a representative
system where the varying sizes of constituencies
mean that votes do not all have equal value.
• Encourages popular participation in politics by
expecting people to take their duties as citizens
seriously
• Removes the need for trusted representatives, as
people can take responsibility for their own decisions.
• Develops a sense of community and encourages
genuine debate
Disadvantages of Direct Democracy
• Impractical in a large, heavily populated modern state
where decision-making is complicated.
• Many people will not want to-or feel qualified to- take
part in decision-making, so political activists decide
what happens.
• Open to manipulation by the cleverest and most
articulate speakers, who will persuade people to
support their viewpoint.
• Will of the majority is not mediated by parliamentary
institutions, so minority viewpoints are disregarded.
Representative Democracy
• In the political science literature, representative
democracy is generally identified with liberal democracy,
in spite of the fact that the term covers a plurality of
different institutional designs-parliamentary and
presidential systems, constitutional monarchies,
authoritarian regimes, centralized and federal states, one
or more chamber parliaments and a diversity of electoral
systems
• Political scientist Dahl captured the essentials of the
liberal democratic system of government by noting the
eight key guarantees.
Dahl’s eight guarantees
• freedom of association,
• freedom of expression,
• the right to vote,
• broad citizen eligibility for public office,
• the right to political leaders to compete for support,
• alternative sources of information,
• free and fair elections,
• institutions that make government policies depend
on voted an other forms of citizen preferences.
Represantative(Indirect) Democracy
• Modern society, with its size and complexity,
offers few opportunities for direct democracy.
• Today, the most common form of democracy,
whether for a town of 50,000 or nations of 50
million, is representative democracy, in which
citizens elect officials to make political
decisions, formulate laws, and administer
programs for the public good.
Represantative Democracy
• How such officials are elected can vary
enormously. On the national level, for
example, legislators can be chosen from
districts that each elect a single
representative.
• Alternatively, under a system of proportional
representation, each political party is
represented in the legislature according to its
percentage of the total vote nationwide
Advantages of Rep. Democracy
• The only practical system in a large modern state, where issues
are complex and often need rapid response (e.g. deployment
of troops).
• Politicians form parties, bringing coherence and giving people a
real choice of representative. Pressure groups form to
represent different interests, promoting debate and
encouraging pluralist democracy.
• Reduces chances of minority rights being overridden by
"tyranny of the majority”.
• Elections allow people to hold representatives to account.
• Politicians are (in theory) better informed than the average
citizen about the many issues on which they must take a view.
Disadvantages of Rep. Democracy
• May lead to reduced participation as people choose to hand
responsibility to politicians.
• Parties and pressure groups are often run by elites pursuing
their own agendas, not truly representing the people.
• Minorities may still find themselves underrepresented as
politicians are more likely to follow the views of the majority to
secure election.
• Politicians are skillful in avoiding accountability, especially as
general elections are five years apart in the UK.
• Politicians may be corrupt and incompetent, may betray
election promises or put loyalty to their party before
responsibility to the electorate.
Majority Rule and Minority Rights