Clear definitions for the terms that shape political systems, elections, institutions, and constitutional rules.
93 terms, grouped by topic and linked back into the political knowledge graph.
17 terms
A system of government where power is held by the people, exercised through elected representatives or direct participation.
A state where the head of state is not a monarch, usually a president elected directly or indirectly.
A system where the executive (prime minister and cabinet) is drawn from and accountable to the legislature.
A system where the president is both head of state and head of government, elected separately from the legislature.
A system with both a directly elected president and a prime minister accountable to parliament, sharing executive power.
A system where a monarch serves as head of state within the limits of a constitution, with real power held by elected officials.
A system where power is constitutionally divided between a central government and regional governments (states, provinces, Länder).
A state where the central government holds supreme authority and any local governments exist at its discretion.
A political system where power is concentrated in a leader or small group, with limited political freedoms and no competitive elections.
An extreme form of authoritarianism where the state seeks total control over public and private life.
A system of government where religious leaders or religious law holds supreme authority over the state.
A system combining democratic elections with the protection of individual rights, rule of law, and institutional checks on power.
A political system where only one party is legally allowed to hold power, either by law or by effective suppression of all alternatives.
A system of government where power is concentrated in the hands of a small, elite group — often defined by wealth, family, or military control.
A system in which political power is effectively controlled by the wealthiest members of society.
A system in which technical experts and specialists — rather than elected politicians — hold decision-making authority.
A system of government in which officials exploit state power to steal public resources for personal enrichment.
11 terms
The chief public representative of a country, which may be a ceremonial or executive role depending on the system.
The leader who runs the executive branch and directs day-to-day government operations — usually a prime minister or president.
The head of government in parliamentary and some semi-presidential systems, accountable to the legislature.
The group of senior ministers who lead government departments and collectively make major policy decisions.
A situation in semi-presidential systems where the president and prime minister are from opposing political camps.
The power of a head of state or government to reject legislation passed by the legislature, preventing it from becoming law.
A directive issued by a president or head of government that has the force of law without requiring legislative approval.
A temporary legal status allowing a government to assume extraordinary powers, suspend normal constitutional rights, or bypass standard legislative procedures.
The temporary imposition of direct military control over civilian government functions, typically during war, insurrection, or breakdown of civil order.
An elected official serving out the remainder of a term after their successor has been chosen or they are constitutionally barred from re-election.
Constitutional or legal restrictions on how many times or for how long an individual may hold a particular elected office.
9 terms
A parliament with two chambers (upper and lower house), each with distinct roles and often different methods of selection.
A parliament with only one chamber, common in smaller countries and unitary states.
A tactic used in the U.S. Senate to delay or block legislation by extending debate indefinitely.
A voting threshold higher than a simple majority — typically two-thirds or three-fifths — required for certain significant decisions.
The minimum number of members of a legislative body who must be present for the body to conduct official business or take a vote.
A legislator appointed by a political party to ensure members attend votes and support the party line.
When a legislator votes against their party's official position or defects to join another party.
A parliamentary procedure in which government ministers — including the prime minister — must answer questions from opposition legislators.
A formal expression of disapproval by a legislature directed at a government minister or the government as a whole.
11 terms
A formal process to charge and potentially remove a sitting head of state or senior official for misconduct.
A parliamentary vote that, if passed, forces the government to resign — the primary mechanism for removing a PM in parliamentary systems.
The division of government into distinct branches (executive, legislative, judicial) that check and balance each other.
The transfer of powers from a central government to regional governments, without changing the country's unitary constitutional status.
The formal ending of a parliamentary session, triggering new elections.
A formal change to a country's constitution, typically requiring a supermajority or special process beyond ordinary legislation.
The formal suspension of a parliamentary session by the head of state, ending that sitting of parliament without dissolving it.
A parliament in which no single party wins an outright majority, making it impossible for any one party to govern alone.
A transitional government that manages day-to-day affairs without making major policy decisions while a new government is being formed.
The power of courts to examine government actions and legislation and strike them down if they are found unconstitutional.
A procedure requiring the legislature to simultaneously remove a government and elect a successor, preventing a power vacuum.
15 terms
An electoral system where seats are allocated to parties in proportion to the votes they receive.
An electoral system where the candidate with the most votes in each constituency wins, regardless of whether they achieve a majority.
The body of electors that formally chooses the U.S. president, with each state allocated electors based on its congressional representation.
An election called earlier than scheduled, usually by the head of government to exploit favorable political conditions.
The practice of drawing electoral district boundaries to favor a particular party or group.
A direct vote by the electorate on a specific political question or proposed law.
The minimum percentage of votes a party must win to gain seats in a proportional representation system.
An electoral system combining constituency seats (first-past-the-post) with proportional party-list seats to achieve overall proportionality.
A state where elections are closely contested and the outcome is not predictable, giving it outsized influence in winner-take-all systems.
An electoral system in which voters rank candidates in order of preference rather than voting for a single candidate.
An electoral system in which a second round of voting is held between the top candidates if no candidate wins an outright majority in the first round.
An election held to fill a single vacant seat between general elections, typically triggered by the death, resignation, or disqualification of a sitting legislator.
The percentage of eligible voters who cast a ballot in an election.
A vote held to remove an elected official from office before their term ends, initiated by a petition from the public.
A process by which citizens can propose new laws or constitutional amendments directly, bypassing the legislature, through a petition and popular vote.
7 terms
A government formed by two or more parties that agree to share power, typically because no single party won a majority.
A political system dominated by two major parties that alternate in power, with minor parties playing a marginal role.
A government that does not command a majority in parliament, relying on issue-by-issue support from other parties.
A government formed by a single party or coalition that holds more than half the seats in parliament, enabling it to pass legislation without relying on other parties.
An arrangement where a smaller party agrees to support a minority government on confidence votes and budget bills, without formally entering a coalition.
The largest party not in government in a Westminster parliamentary system, which formally organizes itself as the official opposition and shadow government.
A group of senior opposition politicians who each shadow a government minister, forming a government-in-waiting.
17 terms
The political position favoring social equality, government intervention in the economy, and progressive social policy.
The political position favoring free markets, traditional values, lower taxes, and limited government intervention.
A political approach that frames politics as a struggle between "the people" and a corrupt or out-of-touch elite.
A political and economic ideology advocating collective or state ownership of the means of production and greater economic equality.
A center-left ideology combining a market economy with a strong welfare state, regulation, and redistribution.
A political ideology that favors preserving traditional institutions, social norms, and gradual change over rapid reform or revolution.
A political ideology centered on individual rights, rule of law, free markets, limited government, and protection of civil liberties.
A political ideology that holds that people with shared identity, culture, or history should constitute a distinct sovereign state.
A political and economic ideology advocating collective ownership of the means of production, the abolition of class divisions, and a stateless, classless society.
A far-right authoritarian ideology emphasizing ultranationalism, dictatorial power, forcible suppression of opposition, and strong social hierarchy.
A political philosophy that prioritizes individual freedom, minimal government, and free markets above collective or state authority.
A political ideology that prioritizes environmental sustainability, social justice, grassroots democracy, and nonviolence.
A political ideology rooted in Catholic social teaching that combines social conservatism with support for a regulated market economy and European integration.
A political philosophy that opposes all involuntary, coercive forms of hierarchy — particularly the state — and advocates for voluntary, non-hierarchical organization.
An economic ideology emphasizing free markets, deregulation, privatization, and reduced government intervention, influential from the 1980s onward.
A political tendency that advocates for social reform, greater equality, and the use of government to improve collective welfare.
A political position that advocates for moderate policies drawing from both left and right, rejecting ideological extremes.
6 terms
The supreme authority of a state to govern itself within its territory without external interference.
Economic or political penalties imposed by one country or group of countries on another to compel a change in behavior.
The ability to influence other countries through attraction, culture, and persuasion rather than military or economic coercion.
The use of military force or economic coercion to influence or compel the behavior of other states.
An approach to international relations in which multiple countries coordinate policy, make decisions collectively, and operate through shared institutions.
A formal, binding agreement between sovereign states governed by international law.