Political Science, asked by sridharutukuri9406, 10 months ago

What are the pillars of democracy discuss any two in detail?

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Answered by As94
1

Hey mate here is your answer

The four pillars of democracy are generally considered as the following:

Freedom: This one is fairly obvious. In most cases, the law puts limits on freedom, but these limits are often to prevent the freedom of others from being infringed. For example, virtually all democracies outlaw theft; the lack of freedom to steal, however, is necessary to maintain the freedom to buy and own personal property.

Representation: Since no modern democracy is a “real” democracy - and the vast majority of nation-states are too large for “real” democracy to feasibly work anyway - representation is vital in ensuring every citizen has a voice. These representatives stand for their respective regions, representing the people within and bringing their concerns to the government.

Equity: Meaning everyone is equal under the law. No one gets special treatment. Everyone has certain inalienable rights, which each nation-state typically lays out in its constitution.

Justice: This ensures that, if a citizen is wronged, there will be compensation to the victim and/or consequences for the wrongdoer. Justice is the vehicle of the law; without justice, the law would have no meaning, and equity and freedom would crumble.

From these four pillars, we get modern representative democracy. Though different nation-states will implement these four concepts differently, these four elements are present in some way in all worldwide democratic systems.

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