Definitions
Random Questions
Political Ideology
Religion in the 6
That's Legitness
100

Definition of sovereignty.

What is the supreme authority within a territory that is not subject to external control?


100

The difference between a state and government. 

What is the state is permanent; a government consists of current officeholders?


100

This ideology emphasizes individual liberty, free markets, and limited government intervention.

What is Liberalism?

100

This country has an official state church, with the monarch as its symbolic head.

What is the United Kingdom?

100

Without legitimacy, a country may face these issues. 

What is instability and rebellion. 

200

Definition of legitimacy.

What is the belief by citizens that a government has the right to rule?

200

All American states do not qualify for the term "state" in political science. Instead, they are this term:

What is a subnational unit of government?

200

This ideology prioritizes tradition, social stability, and respect for established institutions.

What is conservatism?

200

In this country, the constitution guarantees freedom of religion, but the government officially promotes atheism and tightly regulates religious practice.

What is China?

200

An example that would promote stability within a state.

What are economic success, long history of government, strong and inspiring leaders, national pride and unity, good government performance (security, services).

300

Definition of government.

What is the group of individuals currently holding political power in a state?


300

In a Parliamentary system, this branch of government holds most political power. 

What is the legislature?

300

This ideology argues that the means of production should be collectively owned to reduce economic inequality.

What is Socialism?

300

In this country, religious leaders (clerics) hold significant political power through institutions like the Guardian Council.

What is Iran?

300

These are Max Weber's types of legitimacy. 

What are traditional, charismatic, and rational-legal?

400

Definition of Regime. 

What is the formal and informal rules and institutions that determine how power is exercised?


400

This is the defining feature of an Authoritarian regime. 

What is a small group of political elites make decisions without meaningful input from the people? 

400

A political and economic ideology aiming for a classless society with common ownership of the means of production (factories, resources) and no private property, where wealth is distributed based on need.

What is Communism?

400

These 2 countries are the only states to have officially recognized religions.

What are the United Kingdom and Iran?

400

This is the key problem with regimes that have charismatic legitimacy. 

What is people follow because they believe in the leader, not the system/ They are unstable, and often disappear after the leader is gone. 

500

The 4 characteristics of a state.

What is a political entity with a defined territory, permanent population, government, and sovereignty?


500

This is how corporatism and pluralism differ in the way interest groups influence government policy.

What is 

Corporatism = fewer groups, more government coordination.
Pluralism = many groups, open competition for influence.

?



500

This ideology rejects both liberal democracy and socialism, promotes extreme nationalism, and often centers power around a single leader.

What is Fascism?

500

Both of these states are known for being secular to fit within the legacy of communist logic. 

What are China and Russia?

500

How do Irans sources of legitimacy reflect its regime type compared to the United Kingdom?

What is Iran derives legitimacy from clerical authority and the 1979 Revolution well UK draws unconstitutional order.