Political Systems - Vocabulary (Pre-AP)

Forms of Government:

1.  Centralized Government - A form of government where power is concentrated or consolidated in one area (ex: kings, dictators, emperors)

2.  Decentralized Government - A form of government where power is delegated or distributed from the top (ex: Feudalism)

3.  Democracy – A form of government where the people have the power

4.  Republic – A form of democracy where people elect or vote for representatives to make decisions; (Formed in Ancient Rome)

5.  Direct democracy - Form of democracy where citizens had direct say in the making of decisions (Athens, Greece)

6.  Monarchy - Government headed by a king or queen.

7.  Limited/Constitutional Monarchy – Form of government where the king or queen shares power with a legislative branch or a government where the monarch’s power is limited by a constitution.

8.  Absolutism (absolute monarchy) - Government where the king or a queen has total or absolute power/control

9.  Divine right theory – European theory that a monarch’s power to rule comes from God

10.  Totalitarian - Government that has total control over all aspects of the lives of the people. (Ex: Soviet Union, Sparta)

11.  Autocracy - Government ruled by one person with unlimited authority.

12.  Theocracy - Government run by religious leaders or religions ideals (Ex: Iran)

13.  Fascism - Government based on extreme nationalism and an all-powerful state. (Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy)

14.  Dictatorship – A country led by a person given temporary, absolute authority.

15.  Communism - Political system where a dictator sets up a totalitarian state and controls all aspects of life, especially the economy; (Ex: The Soviet Union, China, North Korea, Cuba)

16.  Dynasty – A succession of rulers of a country that come from the same family

17.  Mandate of Heaven – Chinese theory that the right to rule comes from Heaven/God.

18.  Dynastic Cycle – The political cycle in China that explains the rise and fall of dynasties

19.  Feudalism – A decentralized political, system where land was exchanged for loyalty and protection. (land=wealth=power)

Political Ideologies:

20.  Radical - One who works for political change quickly and often violently (Extremists)

21.  Liberal – A person who promotes political and social progress through an active government

22.  Conservative – A person who resists political or social change through the government

Citizenship:

23.  Citizenship – Membership in a political community that carries rights to political participation (i.e. voting)

24.  Suffrage - Movement to gain equal voting rights (ex: Women Suffrage, Black male Suffrage)

25.  Patrician – Citizen of Ancient Rome who was wealthy and was granted full political rights.

26.  Plebeian - citizen of Ancient Rome who was not an aristocrat and were not granted full political rights.

Political Titles:

27.  Czar - Emperor of Russia; derives from the word (Caesar); Tsar

28.  Monarch – A king or queen

29.  Dictator – A person given “temporary” absolute power of a country or nation (Hitler, Stalin)

30.  Emperor - Political ruler of an empire. Similar to a king

Political Units:

31.  City-state - small, independent political unit that built around a larger area; (Sparta or Athens in Greece)

32.  Nation-state - An independent state or country. (Ex: England, France, China)

33.  Empire - A group of states or territories that were conquered and controlled by one ruler (Rome)

34.  Colony – An area under the control of a colonial power; Provides raw materials and serves as an exclusive market for the mother country

35.  Sovereign - A nation or group that has the power to make independent decisions (free nation)

Laws:

36.  Anarchy – The absence of political authority; (chaos)

37.  Laws - Rules for people in a society to follow (to keep order)

38.  Codified laws - laws that have been written down or recorded

39.  Hammurabi’s Code – A strict and harsh codified law system of Babylon that enforced specific punishments for specific crimes; “Eye for an eye”

40.  Legalism – Strict set of laws in China during the Qin dynasty; These laws often used corporal punishment (executions, severing of appendages) towards scholars and nobles

41.  Twelve Tables – Laws that guaranteed the rights of the Roman citizens; SERVES AS THE BASIS FOR MODERN LAW SYSTEMS (Western Civilizations)

42.  Justinian Code - A set of civil laws that provided order in the Byzantine Empire

43.  Magna Carta - A document signed by King John in 1215, granting rights to both the Church and the Nobility in England and is considered to be the first step towards a British democracy as it limited the power of the Monarch

44.  English Bill of Rights - A Bill of Rights that created a limited monarchy and established Parliament as the ruling body of England.

Branches of Government:

45.  Executive – Branch of government that enforces the laws

46.  Legislative – Branch of government that creates or makes the laws

47.  Judicial – Branch of government that interprets the laws (makes judgments)

Government Principles:

48.  Veto – The act of overriding a bill or a law.

49.  Separation of power – Theory that no one branch of the government has all the power; (checks and balances)

50.  Habeas corpus - legal principle that requires authorities to show reasons why a person should be held in custody (Jail); provides a person the right to a speedy trial.