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Election - Definitions of democratic elections |  | Election - Definitions of democratic elections: Encyclopedia II - Election - Definitions of democratic elections |  | In theory, the authority of the government in democracies derives solely from the consent of the governed. The principal mechanism for translating that consent into governmental authority is the holding of free and fair elections.
There is a broad consensus as to what kind of elections can be considered free and fair. Jeane Kirkpatrick, scholar and former United States ambassador to the United Nations, has offered this definition: "Democratic elections are not merely symbolic....They are competitive, periodic, inclusive, definitive el ...
See also:Election, Election - Definitions of democratic elections, Election - Characteristics of elections, Election - Who can vote, Election - Who is voted for, Election - Types of election, Election - Electoral systems, Election - Scheduling, Election - Election campaigns, Election - Difficulties with elections, Election - Show elections, Election - Bias and limited options, Election - Corruption of democracies, Election - Elections around the world |  | | Election, Election - Bias and limited options, Election - Characteristics of elections, Election - Corruption of democracies, Election - Definitions of democratic elections, Election - Difficulties with elections, Election - Election campaigns, Election - Elections around the world, Election - Electoral systems, Election - Scheduling, Election - Show elections, Election - Types of election, Election - Who can vote, Election - Who is voted for, List of politics-related topics |  | |
|  |  | Election: Encyclopedia II - Election - Definitions of democratic elections
Election - Definitions of democratic elections
In theory, the authority of the government in democracies derives solely from the consent of the governed. The principal mechanism for translating that consent into governmental authority is the holding of free and fair elections.
There is a broad consensus as to what kind of elections can be considered free and fair. Jeane Kirkpatrick, scholar and former United States ambassador to the United Nations, has offered this definition: "Democratic elections are not merely symbolic....They are competitive, periodic, inclusive, definitive elections in which the chief decision-makers in a government are selected by citizens who enjoy broad freedom to criticize government, to publish their criticism and to present alternatives."
The Democracy Watch (International) website, further defines fair democratic elections as, "Elections in which great care is taken to prevent any explicit or hidden structural bias towards any one candidate, aside from those beneficial biases that naturally result from an electorate that is equally well informed about the various assets and liabilities of each candidate". This was more formally stated in 2000 by Chief Justice Murray Gleeson of the Australian High Court as "The democratic and lawful means of securing change, if change be necessary, is an expression of the will of an informed electorate."
The apparently simple requirement of an informed electorate is difficult to achieve in modern electorates with thousands of voters, most of whom have no prospects of knowing candidates other than by information published by third parties. The party with the most immediate interest in having structural biases is the government conducting the election. One possible result is the 'show' elections described below.
Some other scholars argue that elections are at most secondary to a functioning democracy. They argue that the rule of law is more important. An example would be pre-unification Hong Kong, which was ruled by an unelected British administrator but was generally considered to be a free and open society due to its strong legal institutions.
Other related archives2004 Iranian parliamentary elections, African Americans, Allotment, Appointment, Aristotle, Australian High Court, British, By-election, Chief Justice, Close elections, Co-option, Coca-Cola, Condorcet method, Constitution, Demarchy, Democracy Watch (International), Dictatorships, Direct democracy, Election (movie), Election law, Elections by country, Elections by date, Electoral Reform, Electoral fraud, Electoral reform, First Nations, First Past the Post (FPP), France, Garrat Elections, General election, Germany, Gerontocracy, Guardian Council, History of democracy, Hong Kong, House of Representatives, House of Representives, Ideologies of parties, Ideology, Iranian constitution, Islamic Revolution, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Liberal democracy, List of politics-related topics, Local election, McDonnell-Douglas, Meritocracy, Microsoft, Murray Gleeson, Napoleon III, Nazis, Netherlands, Noam Chomsky, Participatory democracy, Parties by country, Parties by ideology, Parties by name, Pluralism, Political campaigning, Political campaigns, Political philosophy, Political science, Politics, Politics Portal, Politics by country, Polling station, Predestination, President of Ireland, President of the United States, Presidential election, Primary election, Prime Minister, Psephology, Referendum, Representation, Representative democracy, Russian, Second Empire, Sortition, Soviet Union, Soviet democracy, Switzerland, U.S. Electoral College, U.S. Senators, USA, Unconditional election, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, Victor L. Berger, Vladimir Putin, Voter turnout, Voting, Voting systems, Westminster System, Zimbabwe, absolute majority, accountability, additional member system, administrator, ambassador, ancient Greece, anti-war, approval voting, assembly, authority, ballot, business, campaign advertising, campaigns, candidates, citizens, civil rights movement, clubs, consensus decision-making, constitution, corporations, coups, decision making, democracy, direct democracies, dissolving the legislature, election threshold, electorate, electors, executive, felons, first past the post, freedom of speech, government, head of state, initiatives, instant runoff voting, judiciary, legislature, local government, majoritarian, mandate, media, motion of no-confidence, organizations, parties, party-list proportional representation, plurality, prisoners, proportional, proportional representation, referendum, regional, rule of law, secret ballot, separation of powers, show elections, single transferable vote, socialist, statistics, suffrage, theological concept, theory, third parties, tyrant, voluntary associations, vote, vote counting systems, vote-rigging, voting is compulsory, voting systems
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Definitions of democratic elections", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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