Social Sciences, asked by naopehkonyak5, 1 month ago

Meaning of political stability .(100 words)​

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Answered by ka371973m2
2

Answer:

What is political stability?

Well, the opposite of stability is collapse, so "political stability" generally refers to where a nation's politics fit on a spectrum between those two extremes.

A nation that is constantly having political coups or revolutions or civil wars would be said to have very low political stability, since there would be very low levels of respect for the existing political order, constitution, and government institutions by key political players like politicians, judges, and army officers. One could not take it for granted that, say, the president would be in power (or perhaps even alive) within a year, regardless of how long he was supposed to rule, simply because the political culture would be so chaotic and disrespectful basically any assumption, custom, or convention would have a high likelihood of being ignored or undermined for any number of reasons.

A nation with high political stability would be one where politics was extremely predictable. For example, an extremely oppressive totalitarian dictatorship that had been ruled by the same family for ten generations. There'd be no question about who was running the show, or who would be running the show in the future, or whose orders everyone was going to obey in a system like that. But a country that's been a safe and peaceful democracy for more than a century — like say the United States, Canada, or Sweden — would be very stable as well, since their history would help foster enormous public reverence for respecting the traditions of elections and resolving political disputes within the well-understood rules and precedences of the Constitution

Answered by ItzCuteAyush0276
1

Definition: The index of Political Stability and Absence of Violence/Terrorism measures perceptions of the likelihood that the government will be destabilized or overthrown by unconstitutional or violent means, including politically-motivated violence and terrorism.

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