Social Sciences, asked by praneethashivap5748, 11 months ago

Differentiate
between community and coalition government

Answers

Answered by Riteshkumar2507
5

A federal system of governance consists of layers of semi-autonomous governments concentrating on ever more local issues: National, State, County, City. Subordinate layers may have laws different from others at the same level. Switzerland is a federation of cantons, the United States is a federation of states.

A coalition government is monolithic, formed by a coalition of different political interests, ruling as a single government, possibly within a federal system. A federal system could have several coalition governments within it.


theshildfan19: this answer is good but try to make it simple
Answered by hotelcalifornia
13

Answer:

A "coalition government" is formed when different "political parties" come together to form an "alliance" and/or a government.  

A "community government" is the government in which different social groups have the power to control the issues of their community. It is elected by the "people" speaking the same language irrespective of the place where they reside. However, they do not have absolute power as government controls issues related to education, language and culture. Their aim is work for the benefit of everyone in the society.    

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