History, asked by saleemas209, 10 months ago

In a democratic country the also have a right to know about the activities of the government they have elected​

Answers

Answered by arevathiprakash
0

Answer:

The stories and the analysis in the previous chapter gave us a sense of

what democracy is like. There we described some governments as

democratic and some as non-democratic. We saw how governments in

some of those countries changed from one form to the other. Let us now

draw general lessons from those stories and ask the more basic question:

What is democracy? What are its features? This chapter builds on a simple

definition of democracy. Step by step, we work out the meaning of the

terms involved in this definition. The aim here is to understand clearly the

bare minimum features of a democratic form of government. After going

through this chapter we should be able to distinguish a democratic form

of government from a non-democratic government. Towards the end of

this chapter, we step beyond this minimal objective and introduce a broader

idea of democracy.

In the previous chapter, we have seen that democracy is the most

prevalent form of government in the world today and it is expanding to

more countries. But why is it so? What makes it better than other forms of

government? That is the second big question that we take up in this chapter.

Explanation:

Answered by raotd
0

Answer:

In a democratic country, people have the right to question the government for its decisions. They have the power to overthrow the current government and bring another political party into power in the next elections. This drives the ruling government to work with dedication and take fair decisions considering public interest.

Explanation:

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