Edexcel- Gov and Pol- Unit 1- Democracy

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A level Government and Politics Slides sobre Edexcel- Gov and Pol- Unit 1- Democracy, criado por Meg Willkins em 10-04-2017.
Meg Willkins
Slides por Meg Willkins, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Meg Willkins
Criado por Meg Willkins mais de 7 anos atrás
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Resumo de Recurso

Slide 1

    Democracy
    AS Government and Politics- Edexcel

Slide 2

    Legitimacy
    Legitimacy is the right for an individual or body to be recognised and have the right to exercise their power.In a democratic country an individual or political institution may be given legitimacy through elections. It can be argued that the UK government lacks this legitimacy as they only have a minority of the overall votes. The Coalition Government in 2010 lacked legitimacy as they didn't have an electoral mandate.Authority is linked to Legitimacy and is the right to exercise power.Legitimacy refers also to the degree of which an individual or body can exerise their power. Power is the ability someone has to force others to do things they may not normally do.

Slide 3

    Citizenship
    As a Citizen we have enjoyment of certain rights, such as the right for run for office, equal treatment under the law and the right to a fair trail.We have certain liberties, such as the freedom of movement, expression,But we also have certain obligations, such as paying tax or obeying the law,The Labour Government introduced 'Active Citizenship' and the Conservative Government in 2010 introduced 'Big Society' to help encourage political participation, such as volunteering for a charity, protecting the environment.

Slide 4

    Democracy
    is  a system of Government where people have access to independent information and can influence decisions. The government is accountable. Free elections Good turnout at these elections Government is accountable  High degree of freedom for all people have access to information Government operates in the broad interests of all Tolerance of different political interests and beliefs

Slide 5

    Direct Democracy
    This is where people make decisions themselves , are consultated on decisions and may take an initiate to create a political change.A referendum is an example, in the Uk- EU Referendum in 2016Public Consultations

Slide 6

    Representative Democracy
    People will vote in an election for a representative who will represent their constituency Don't make decisions themselves but the people will delegate this power to their representative Range of political parties with different ideologies and beliefs Pressure Groups represent certain sections or issues in socitey

Slide 7

    Pluralist Democracy
    This is where there is a range of individuals and political institutions that are allowed to operate and they are allowed to flourish due to the acceptance of different beliefs.There are many sources of independent information and opinion from the media.There is a dispersal of power to individuals, bodies or institutions rather than a concentration of power.An example is the USA

Slide 8

    Liberal Democracy
    It has the same aspects of a normal democracy but also:protects individuals libertiesa strong constitution that limits the power of the GovernmentThe Government has strong internal checks and balances high level of political toleranceAn example is Germany

Slide 9

    How representation works in the UK
    MP's- represent individual constituencies or as a whole, a section of society, a cause or a national interest but they may also repesent their party and its electoral manifesto Parties may represent sections of society or specific political views (e.g- Labour associated with the working class) Pressure groups represent certain issues or sections in society House of Commons represent a national interest House of Lords may represent certain sections of society, causes or the national interest

Slide 10

    Parliamentary Democracy
    This is where a Parliament or political association is the key institution and may hold all the power. They can make the Government accountable and Parliament may be the key representative. Government is drawn from Parliament and is also a part of it. Form of liberal democracy

Slide 11

    Democracy in the UK

Slide 12

    Ways to participate in democracy in the UK
    vote in national, regional or local elections and vote in referendums become a member of a political party be an activist in a political party be a member or support a pressure group activist in a pressure group stand for office at a local, regional or national level be part of a political consulation

Slide 13

    Evidence of decline in political participation
    turnouts at elections and referendums have been declining party membership has fallen partisan dealingment However, participation has changed growth in the number and membership of pressure groups more direct action (protest against rise in tuition fees) more campaigning through social media

Slide 14

    Ways to increase participation
    Vote at 16 It is good as it makes political education relevant, improves level of political identification and makes them more politically aware but people argue that 16 year old cannot make a judgement and probably wouldn't vote Compulsory voting turnout levels will increase, it will make the outcome more legitimate and people will engage with politics abuse of peoples freedom, expensive to do and may make the result artificial

Slide 15

    Citizenship education people will have more knowledge and greater interest but, it would be expensive and may not create a genuine interest Digital Democracy greater access for all promote a more direct form of democracy vast source of political information on the internet improve turnout levels at elections but, some people may not be able to participate if they do not understand technology. It could be subject to hacking and there could be false information circulating

Slide 16

    How democratic is the UK?
    For frequent, free elections Freedom of Information Act- citizens can obtain important government information and the administration of the state ability to vote, join a political party or form a party or other political association number of political parties and other associations (pressure groups) that are allowed to flourish referendums are held from time to time on important constitutional decisions rule of law- all are equal independent judiciary- safeguards rule of law

Slide 17

    Against Unelected institutions- House of Lords and the Monarchy First past the post voting system is not fair Government elected on the minority of votes Decline in participation and an increase in disengagement with political parties Parliamentary Sovereignity means individuals rights and freedoms are not adequately protected as the constitution is not entrenched the distribution of power is not certain

Slide 18

    Assessment of methods to improve the UK's Democracy

Slide 19

    Replacing the Monarchy with a head of stateForHead of state would be accountableIncrease the democratic legitimacy of the head of stateBe able to sort out any political deadlocksAgainstDestable the political systemHead of state may give too much power to the Government

Slide 20

    Having an elected second chamberForThe second chamber would be more legitimateDemocratic chamber be an effective check on the GovernmentAgainstWon't be independantMay excessively check the GovernmentMay challenge the authority of Parliament

Slide 21

    Increase in use of referendumsForIncrease political participationPurest form of democracyMake people more politically awareAgainsttoo many referendums may result in voters fatigue and low turnoutMinorities are ignored as only the majority winsElectorates may not understand complex issues or may vote emotionally

Slide 22

    Reforming the voting systemForVoting would be fairer and give the electorate more choice plus reduced the number of wasted votesParliament would be more representativeincreased democratic legitimacy of mp's and the governmentAgainstWith proportionate representative you loose the link between the MP and the constituenciesVoters may find it hard to adapt to a new systemMultiparty Governments are less stable. It may be hard to form a government if there is not a majority

Slide 23

    Introduce a codified constitutionForcitizens would know the distribution of power and what limits of power the political associations haveit would stop the drift of power over to strong governmentsRights and freedoms would be adequately protectedAgainstWon't be as flexibleMay limit the Governments power too muchtoo much power in the hands of unaccountable, unelected judges to interpret the constitution

Slide 24

    Decentralizing the GovernmentForLocal and regional governments are smaller and more democraticCurb the increasing power of the central governmentBring the government closer to the peopleAgainstif the local and regional governments have more power there would be more variable state provisionsThe people may take local and regional government elections less seriously, which would mean a low turnout

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