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How Far Do We In Britain Live In A Democracy?

Below is a short sample of the essay How Far Do We In Britain Live In A Democracy?. If you sign up you could be reading the rest of this essay in under two minutes. Registered users should login to view the essay.

How Far Do We In Britain Live In A Democracy?

The definition of democracy is rule by the people, or the power of the people. The demos comes from the ancient Greek, it is the people and kratos is to rule. Democracy today has come to mean the decisions arrived by the majority (or a simple majority), the right of every citizen to vote and hold office, and the duty of all citizens to participate actively in the system. So in an undefined sense, political power is ultimately in the hands of the whole adult population, and no smaller group has the right to rule. But only when democracy is qualified by other words, such as liberal, representative and direct, can it take on a more useful meaning. So to understand democracy, we must look at these different faces of it.
Liberal democracy is most commonly seen in industrialised western countries. It has four main ideas:
· That the government should be limited (the individual should enjoy some protection from arbitrary government), and its purpose should be the removal of obstacles to individual well-being;
· The market should have a paramount role with minimum state interference;
· The state should play the role of night-watchman; the franchise should be steadily extended to encompass men with property to members of the working class.
The overall idea is that there should be a limited government, the individual should enjoy some protection from arbitrary government and that the government should be in some way tied to the will of the people. The central existence of liberal democracy is the existence of civil liberties  the freedom of speech, freedom of assembly and the freedom to dissent. In Britain these civil liberties and guaranteed by the rule of law and the separation of powers. The rule of law guarantees us equality before the law. And the separation of power maintains a separate executive and jury, so that laws enforceable in courts can curtail the powers of rulers.
But a criticism of liberal democracy is that our rights and freedoms are not all that free. So although we, as British citizens have freedom from arbitrary arrest, we can be arrested on suspicion; although we have freedom of expression, we are not free of libel; although we have the right to be free from surveillance without due process, it can be given by a judge, and although we have the right to the freedom of movement, we are still controlled by passports.
It has been thought that liberal democracy has come to embody the ...

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