Politics/Related Articles: Difference between revisions

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{{r|Peronism}}
{{r|Peronism}}
{{r|Personalism}}
{{r|Personalism}}
===Political theories===
{{r|Keynesianism}}
{{r|Monetarism}}


===Political systems===
===Political systems===
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{{r|John Locke}}
{{r|John Locke}}
{{r|John Stuart Mill}}
{{r|John Stuart Mill}}
{{r|Plato}}
{{r|John Rawls}}
{{r|John Rawls}}
{{r|Milton Friedman}}
{{r|Adam Smith}}
{{r|Socrates}}


===Political Writing===
===Political Writing===
{{r|The Prince}}
{{r|Common Sense (Thomas Paine)}}
{{r|Common Sense (Thomas Paine)}}


===Political institutions===
===Political institutions===
{{r|Congresses of the United States}}
{{r|Congresses of the United States}}
{{r|Political party}}
{{r|United Nations}}
===Political policies===
{{r|Fiscal policy}}


===Politicians===
===Politicians===
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{{r|Calvin Coolidge}}
{{r|Calvin Coolidge}}
{{r|Oliver Cromwell}}
{{r|Oliver Cromwell}}
{{r|Mikhail Gorbachev}}
{{r|Andrew Bonar Law}}
{{r|Andrew Bonar Law}}
{{r|Pericles}}


===Politically important events===
===Politically important events===
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{{r|Crash of 1929}}
{{r|Crash of 1929}}
{{r|Crash of 2008}}
{{r|Crash of 2008}}
{{r|Great Depression}}
===Political policies===
===Political policies===


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{{r|Financial system}}
{{r|Financial system}}
{{r|Fiscal conservatism}}
{{r|Fiscal conservatism}}
{{r|Fiscal policy}}
{{r|Great Depression}}
{{r|Keynesianism}}
{{r|Mikhail Gorbachev}}
{{r|Monetarism}}
{{r|National debt}}
{{r|National debt}}
{{r|Noam Chomsky}}
{{r|Noam Chomsky}}
{{r|Pericles}}
{{r|Philosophy}}
{{r|Philosophy}}
{{r|Plato}}
{{r|Political party}}
{{r|Political philosophy}}
{{r|Political philosophy}}
{{r|Province}}
{{r|Province}}
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{{r|Rent-seeking}}
{{r|Rent-seeking}}
{{r|Slavery}}
{{r|Slavery}}
{{r|Adam Smith}}
{{r|Socialism}}
{{r|Socialism}}
{{r|Socrates}}
{{r|Taxation}}
{{r|Taxation}}
{{r|The Prince}}
{{r|United Nations}}

Revision as of 06:43, 17 November 2009

This article is developed but not approved.
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A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Politics.
See also changes related to Politics, or pages that link to Politics or to this page or whose text contains "Politics".

Parent topics

  • Civic culture [r]: Related political and social attitudes crucial to the success of modern democracies. [e]
  • Economics [r]: The analysis of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. [e]
    • Financial system [r]: The interactive system of organisations that serve as intermediaries between lenders and borrowers. [e]
  • Government [r]: The system by which a community or nation is controlled and regulated. A government is a person or group of persons who govern a political community or nation. [e]
  • Philosophy [r]: The study of the meaning and justification of beliefs about the most general, or universal, aspects of things. [e]
    • Political philosophy [r]: Branch of philosophy that deals with fundamental questions about politics. [e]
      • Communism [r]: A political ideology, and also a system of government, according to which the means of production (including all large business concerns) should be controlled by the government. [e]
      • Democracy [r]: A form of government in which ultimate sovereignty rests with the people. [e]
      • Islamism [r]: Add brief definition or description
      • Utilitarianism [r]: Philosophical doctrine created by Jeremy Bentham and James Mill which states that an action can be considered good to the extent that it increases the general level of happiness in society. [e]
  • Pseudostate [r]: A term put forward by the author and journalist Adam Hochschild to refer to political states or regions where power rests with a government or organisation either outside the country or in some way unaccountable - for example, a local militia. [e]}
  • Public expenditure [r]: Spending by the public sector [e]
  • Public good [r]: Products and services that can only be collectively financed because it is not feasible to require individual users to pay for using them. [e]
  • Prerogative power [r]: A legal doctrine that empowers a Head of State or government to act beyond the laws of a nation, when the supreme national interests of that nation are involved [e]
  • Social capital [r]: Productive assets arising out of social relations, such as trust, cooperation, solidarity, social networks of relations and those beliefs, ideologies and institutions that contribute to production of goods. [e]
  • Social contract [r]: Agreement among the members of an organized society or between the governed and the government defining and limiting the rights and duties of each. [e]

Subtopics

General ideologies

National ideologies and groups

Political theories

Political systems

Political theories

Political thinkers

Political Writing

Political institutions

Political policies

Politicians

Politically important events

Political policies

Tools of politics


Related topics