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How Governments Form: Political Systems Explained: Authority Structures, Governance Models, and Institutional Evolution from Monarchy to Democracy
Coles
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How Governments Form: Political Systems Explained: Authority Structures, Governance Models, and Institutional Evolution from Monarchy to Democracy in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $14.99


By None
How Governments Form: Political Systems Explained: Authority Structures, Governance Models, and Institutional Evolution from Monarchy to Democracy in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $14.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Political systems reflect fundamental questions about legitimacy, power distribution, and collective decision-making that societies address through diverse institutional arrangements. This history examines how different governance models emerged, functioned, and transformed, revealing patterns in how humans organize authority while responding to internal pressures and external challenges. Drawing on constitutional documents, legislative records, political treatises, and comparative analysis, the narrative explores major governance systems across civilizations. Monarchies concentrated authority in hereditary rulers claiming divine sanction or traditional legitimacy. Aristocracies distributed power among landowning elites. Theocracies vested authority in religious institutions and sacred law. City-states experimented with citizen assemblies practicing direct democracy or oligarchic councils representing merchant classes. The book traces institutional innovations that shaped modern systems. Republican Rome balanced consular executive power with senatorial deliberation and tribunician veto rights. Medieval parliaments emerged as monarchs negotiated taxation with representative estates. The Enlightenment generated theories of social contract, separation of powers, and natural rights that justified limiting governmental authority. Revolutionary movements established constitutional frameworks codifying rights and institutional checks.
Political systems reflect fundamental questions about legitimacy, power distribution, and collective decision-making that societies address through diverse institutional arrangements. This history examines how different governance models emerged, functioned, and transformed, revealing patterns in how humans organize authority while responding to internal pressures and external challenges. Drawing on constitutional documents, legislative records, political treatises, and comparative analysis, the narrative explores major governance systems across civilizations. Monarchies concentrated authority in hereditary rulers claiming divine sanction or traditional legitimacy. Aristocracies distributed power among landowning elites. Theocracies vested authority in religious institutions and sacred law. City-states experimented with citizen assemblies practicing direct democracy or oligarchic councils representing merchant classes. The book traces institutional innovations that shaped modern systems. Republican Rome balanced consular executive power with senatorial deliberation and tribunician veto rights. Medieval parliaments emerged as monarchs negotiated taxation with representative estates. The Enlightenment generated theories of social contract, separation of powers, and natural rights that justified limiting governmental authority. Revolutionary movements established constitutional frameworks codifying rights and institutional checks.

















