7.4.spi.1. define the different types of governments (i.e., democracy, autocracy, oligarchy,...

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Types of Government 7.4.spi.1. define the different types of governments (i.e., democracy, autocracy, oligarchy, monarchy, dictatorship).

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Types of Government

7.4.spi.1. define the different types of governments (i.e., democracy, autocracy,oligarchy, monarchy, dictatorship).

Governments

How are they run?

AutocracyPower and authority of rule from one person. It is the

oldest and most common form of government.

Advantages

1. It is fast. When one person makes all the decisions, no one needs to be consulted and time is not taken to gather a vote.

2. Helpful when critical decisions need to be made in a crises or for social control.

Disadvantages

1. Thoughts of other people are not considered.

2. People do not have freedom.

3. Over time, autocracy decision making leads to distrust, low morale, and inefficiency.

4. Military is used against people if they try to protest or disagree.

AutocracyRule of One

Types of AutocraciesAbsolute MonarchyTheocracyTotalitarian Dictatorship

Saudi Arabia (Absolute Monarchy)Iran (Theocracy) Tsarist regimes in Russia (1892-1917)Nazi regime in Germany (1933-1945)China North Korea

Examples of Autocratic Governments

Types of Autocratic Governments

Autocracy – Rule by one

Totalitarian Dictatorship

Monarchy (king or queen)

Absolute Monarchy (complete and

unlimited power)

Constitutional Monarchy (shares

power with elected parliament and prime minister)

Theocracy

Autocracy: Dictatorship

Rule by a single leader who has not been elected. Inotherwords, leader is in power without the people's consent. May use force to keep control.

In a military dictatorship, the army is in control. Usually, there is little or no attention to public opinion or individual rights.

Leader is glorified.

Government controls all aspect of social and economic life.

Burma, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, China, Zimbabwe, West Indies, North Korea, Burma, Cuba, Chile, Uganda, Equatorial Guinea, Sudan, and Turkmenistan

Examples of totalitarian regimes are Italy under Benito Mussolini 1922–45; Germany under Adolf Hitler 1933–45; the USSR under Joseph Stalin from the 1930s until his death in 1953; and more recently Romania under Nicolae Ceauşescu 1974–89.

Totalitarian Dictators

Other Totalitarian Dictators

Raul CastroPresident of Cuba

Communist

He is the younger brother of Fidel Castro, Cuba's former president.

Totalitarian Dictators

Autocratic Totalitarian DictatorshipRule by a single political party. Votes for alternative candidates and

parties are simply not allowed and “encouraged” to vote, but only for the government’s chosen candidate.

North Korea

Usually inherits the “throne”. Usually through a family.

King or Queen has power

Monarchy

MonarchyTwo Kinds

Absolute Monarchy Constitutional Monarchy

Monarchy Two Kinds

Autocracy – Rule by one

Totalitarian Dictatorship

Monarchy (king or queen)

Absolute Monarchy (complete and

unlimited power)

Constitutional Monarchy (shares

power with elected parliament and prime minister)

Theocracy

Many nations who were once absolute monarchs , such as Jordan and Morocco, have moved to constitutional monarchies, although the monarch retains tremendous power.

Saudi Arabia King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia

http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/3584.htm

Mecca – time for prayer

Water Problems: http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/oil-water-and-wheat-3-9667

Autocracy: Absolute MonarchySaudi Arabia

Autocracy: Theocracy

A form of government where the rulers claim to be ruling on behalf of a set of religious ideas, or as direct agents of a deity.

Can government systems be a combination?

How is the government run?AutocracyRule by one

How is the government run?DictatorshipLeader w/o consent, does not consider welfare of people. Often uses military force.

How is the government run?Absolute Monarchy

Monarchy with absolute control

How is the government

run? Theocracy

Spiritual Authority

Saudi Arabia

OligarchyA small group picks the government.

The rule of a few.

A form of government which consists of rule by an elite group who rule in their own interest, especially to accumulate wealth and privilege. Only members of this small group have a voice in government.

The few are generally the people who are richer and more powerful than others: aristocrats or nobles.

Often by powerful families who raise their children to “inherit” the government position.

Government of the “best”.

OligarchyRule by a few

The few pick the government

Examples: China (communist), South Africa in 20th century

Most Communist countries are oligarchies.

Examples: Former Soviet Union

OligarchyRule by a few

The few pick the government

OligarchyRule by few: Communism

The single party picks the government.

Totalitarian DictatorshipGovernment tells people

what to do

China

OligarchyRule by a few

The few pick the government

The whites in South Africa make up about 20% of population, but this small group has all educational and economic opportunities and proceeded to deny these opportunities to blacks. Called apartheid –legal separation based on race – this oligarchy dominated the Republic of South Africa from 1948 – 1993. Nelson Mandela led the force that changed this type of rule to democracy in 1994. He is now their first black president. http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-apartheid.htm

Democracy Two Kinds

Democracy

Direct Democracy

(everyone votes for everything)

Representative Democracy

Presidential Democracy

System

Parliamentary Democracy

System

Direct DemocracyPeople vote of everything

Government in which all citizens have equal power. Every decision is voted on by the people. Rule by majority.

Advantages

1. Every citizen has equal power in matters of government. Every citizen is involved in the decision making.

2. Since all citizens are involved in decision making, there is a high degree of support and loyalty.

Disadvantages

1. Only works when a small number of people are involved. Must gather all citizens in one place for discussions and voting.

2. Decision making involving all citizens is time-consuming. All citizens give input, debate, etc…

Direct Democracy

Rarely exists has a total form of government because countries are now too large.

Switzerland has a direct democracy.

Representative DemocracyPeople pick government

Government in which people elect representatives to make decision for them.

Advantages

1. People still have the power.

2. They elect officials to represent their interests at meetings.

3. The representatives will vote for the people.

4. Practiced where there are too many people for a direct democracy.

5. People can vote, protest and lobby. Can write their congressman or senator.

Disadvantages

1. Decision making is time consuming. Desire of representatives to please majority of constitutes may be harmful.

2. Representatives may not always agree with constitutes.

3. Lack of involved citizens allow special interest groups to influence or dominate representatives.

Representative Democracy

Examples of Representative Democratic Governments

Parliamentary democracy

Presidential democracy

Aruba, Australia, Bangladesh, Bulgaria, United Kingdom

United States, Mexico, Brazil

Representative DemocracyA presidential system is a system of government where an executive branch exists and presides (hence the name) separately from the legislature, to which it is not accountable and which cannot, in normal circumstances, dismiss it.

People pick the president by voting.

What is Democracy?http://

www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuY-DVsU4BY

Democracy

Direct Democracy

(everyone votes for everything)

Representative Democracy

Presidential Democracy

Parliamentary Democracy

Parliamentary DemocracyLed by representatives of the people. Each is chosen as a member of a

political party and remains in power as long as his/her party is in power.

Advantages

1. Quicker legislative action because the executive branch is chosen from the parliament’s majority party.

2. Prime Minister is accountable to the parliament and can be removed at any time by a vote of no confidence.

Disadvantages

1. Close connection between the executive and legislative branches and absence of a clear separation of power provides less protection against government control.

2. Less protection by rule of the majority.

ParliamentaryRule by All

States currently utilizing parliamentary systems are denoted in red and orange—the former being constitutional monarchies where authority is vested in a parliament, the latter being parliamentary republics whose parliaments are effectively supreme over a separate head of state. States denoted in green have the roles of head of state and head of government in one office, similar to presidential systems, but this office is filled by parliament's choice and elected separately.

What government systems is Canada?

Representative DemocracyParliamentary systems are characterized by no clear-cut separation of powers between the executive and legislative branches, leading to a different set of checks and balances compared to those found in presidential systems.

Parliamentary systems usually have a clear differentiation between the head of government and the head of state, with the head of government being the prime minister or premier, and the head of state often being a figurehead, often a monarchy..

Constitutional Monarchy

Monarch is guided by a constitution. Monarch rights, duties, and

responsibilities are spelled out in a constitution.

Parliamentary

A government in which members of the executive branch (Prime Minister and

advisors) are chosen by parliament.

Representative Democracy

A form of government in which power rests with the people, but

usually through representatives.

Canada

RepublicA Government by the Public

Led by representatives of the people. Each is individually chosen for a set period of time.

Advantages

1. Separation of powers, providing checks and balances.

2. Direct election of the President and legislators to a fixed term of office makes them more accountable to voters.

3. More directly democratic.

Disadvantages

1. Divided government causes more disagreement between the president and legislature. Policy gridlock can result.

2. Divided government can make it difficult to pass policies.

RepublicA Government by the Public

Led by representatives of the people. Each is individually chosen for a set period of time.

A Republic, unique from democracy, has a very different purpose and an entirely different form, or system, of government. Its purpose is to control The Majority strictly, as well as all others among the people, primarily to protect The Individual’s God-given, unalienable rights and therefore for the protection of the rights of The Minority, of all minorities, and the liberties of people in general. The definition of a Republic is: a constitutionally limited government of the representative type, created by a written Constitution--adopted by the people and changeable (from its original meaning) by them only by its amendment--with its powers divided between three separate Branches: Executive, Legislative and Judicial. Here the term "the people" means, of course, the electorate.

http://www.lexrex.com/enlightened/AmericanIdeal/aspects/demrep.html

RepublicA Government by the Public

Led by representatives of the people. Each is individually chosen for a set period of

time.

Republic

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2128.html

AnarchyWhere there is not any government. This can happen after a civil war in a

country, when a government has been destroyed and rival groups are fighting to take its place. Primarily lawlessness and political disorder.

Advantages

1. None

Disadvantages

1. Disorder

2. Corruption

3. Warfare

AnarchySomalia

Population: 7,200,000Capital: MogadishuArea: 246,200 Sq. Miles (smaller than Texas)Religion: Sunni Muslim, other

Chaos and RebellionCivil W

ar since 1991

Anarchy Somalia

Barre and

Socialism

•1960 became independent from British rule.

•Said Barre seized power in 1969, proclaiming socialism.

•But instead of developing the country, he attached Ethiopia.

Barre and

Dictatorsh

ip

•After spending a lot of money on the war, Somalia’s economy deteriorated and weakened.

•Fighting between clans grew worse.

Hahdi and

Anarchy

• January 1991 to November 1991 Mohammad Ali Hahdi assumed power (ousted Barre and declared himself president)

•Clan warfare grew worse.

•300,000 people died and 1.5 million were forced to flee as refugees.

•Many other people died of starvation.

Aidid and

Anarchy

•Mohamed Farrah Aided took control

•Anarchy, no government control

AnarchySomalia

Refugee Camp

REMEMBER: nearly every country in the world is ruled by a system that

combines 2 or more government

systems.

How is the government run?

RepublicLed by

representatives

Who picks government?Representative Democracy

Who picks government?

Rule by majority.

U.S.

Review

Name the forms of government that fall under the category of AUTOCRACY.  Define each and give  examples.

 How do some dictatorships and oligarchies try to make it seem as if the people have a say in the government?  How does the government really control the people?

What are the two forms of democracy?  Describe what happens in each.

What are the characteristics that make a government a true democracy?

What gives voters a choice among candidates?  What are some other benefits to this system?

What ancient civilizations as well as early American civilizations could be labeled as Theocratic and why?  Are there any THEOCRACIES today?

Types of Government Outline

I. How is the government run?A. Autocracy

1. Absolute Monarchy2. Theocracy3. Dictatorship

B. TotalitarianC. TotalitarianismD. MonarchyE. ParliamentaryF. RepublicG. Anarchy

II. Who picks the government?A. RevolutionB. TotalitarianC. OligarchyD. Democracy

1. Direct Democracy2. Representative Democracy

Country Leader/ President/Prime Minister

The United States of America President Barack Obama

Canada Prime Minister Stephen Harper

Mexico President Enrique Peña Nieto

England Prime Minister David Cameron

Russia President Vladimir Putin

ChinaPresident

(not voted in by the people, voted by the oligarchy)

Xi Jinping

Germany President Joachim Gauck

North Korea Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un

Cuba President Raúl Castro