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Constitutional democracies

Across
Constitutional tools that enable branches of government to resist any illegitimate expansion of power by other branches.
The U.S. government is often called a presidential democracy because the chief executive is elected in balloting separate from the vote for members of Congress. A presidential system is characterized by a separation of powers in which the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the national government are each responsible to different constituencies for the exercise of their respective powers and responsibilities.
A form of government in which political decisions are made directly by citizens, rather than by their representatives.
Division of the legislature into two houses.
A system of limited government, based on majority rule, in which political power is scattered among many factions and interest groups and governmental actions and institutions must conform to rules defined by a constitution.
The organization of government into distinct areas of legislative, executive, and judicial functions, each responsible to different constituencies and possessing its own powers and responsibilities; the system of dividing the governmental powers among three branches and giving each branch a unique role to play while making all three interdependent.
The principle that any candidate or program that receives at least half of all votes plus one prevails.
A system of limited government based on the division of authority between the central government and smaller regional governments.
The concept that the power and discretion of government and its officials ought to be restrained by a supreme set of neutral rules that prevent arbitrary and unfair action by government; also called the rule of law.
A form of government in which most or all power to make and enforce laws resides in the central government; opposite of a federal system.
Down
model of democracy that sees the individual as part of a world order, not merely (or even primarily) as a citizen of a particular nation-state; often summarized in the slogan, Think globally, act locally.
The condition arising when a dominant group uses its control of the government to abuse the rights of minority groups.
John Calhoun's theory of democracy, which holds that the main function of government is to mediate between and among the different economic, social, and sectional interests in U.S. society.
The concept that the power and discretion of government and its officials ought to be restrained by a supreme set of neutral rules that prevent arbitrary and unfair action by government; also called constitutionalism.