Difference between revisions of "Democracy"

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(History and philosophy)
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The [[wikipedia:Liberal democracy#Origins|Wikipedia article on liberal democracy]] gives a good overview of how modern democracies evolved.
The [[wikipedia:Liberal democracy#Origins|Wikipedia article on liberal democracy]] gives a good overview of how modern democracies evolved.


Daniel Ziblatt [http://harvardmagazine.com/2017/05/making-liberal-democracies posits] that the factional strength of a country's elites determined the survival of democracy, not a rise in living standards or an uprising of the working or middle class.
Daniel Ziblatt [http://harvardmagazine.com/2017/05/making-liberal-democracies posits] that the factional strength of a country's elites determines the survival of democracy, not a rise in living standards or an uprising of the working or middle class.


= Voting =
= Voting =

Revision as of 15:47, 1 October 2017

History and Philosophy

The Wikipedia article on liberal democracy gives a good overview of how modern democracies evolved.

Daniel Ziblatt posits that the factional strength of a country's elites determines the survival of democracy, not a rise in living standards or an uprising of the working or middle class.

Voting

Who shows up to vote?

How do votes translate to decisions?

Requires diversity and education.

Ka-Ping Yee's voting simulation visualizations.

U.S. Population

Religion

According to Pew Research[1]:

  • Evangelical Protestant — 25.4%
  • Mainline Protestant — 14.7%
  • Black church — 6.5%
  • Catholic — 20.8%

According to Gallup, 2014 "Beliefs and Values" survey suggested that 42 percent of Americans are creationists, 31 percent are theistic evolutionists, and 19 percent are atheistic evolutionists.[2]

Foreign Policy

Transformational versus transactional diplomacy

References