I think the prime reason why a government would be unstable is when the government's actions and powers do not match with the needs of the populace. Those needs can be many different things and can be different things at different times: food, shelter, infrastructure, protection from bad neighbors, protection from invaders... the list would take me a day and a half.
If you look back at the collapse of the USSR, there was a misalignment between the people's needs and what the government gave. If you look at the current USA, the least stable places are where government is deliberately creating friction with the citizens, and close to that are the places where government is not creating a good framework for people's needs to be met.
Corruption can be a symptom of this mismatch, but in and of itself is not the prime reason for instability. Go look at various nation-states throughout history. The unstable governments were and are the ones where a large segment of people felt the government wasn't doing anything to help them with their needs.
He facet of job satisfaction that norcraft has fostered is :
Promotion satisfaction
This usually tend to make the employees work harder because they believe that they have a bright opportunities ahead of them
hello,
if a serf decided to run away/run away to another country,
there may not be proof of their standing, Also they would send men to hunt serf's down, The family of the serf would also be fined/or evicted.
Thank you have a great day:)
It is called False Authority. This is utilizing an expert as confirmation in your contention when the specialist isn't generally an expert on the certainties significant to the contention. As the crowd, enabling an insignificant specialist to add validity to the claim being made.
Answer:
They wanted to set rules for the people, the power may be the peoples' but they needed to set "ground rules". Like owning a house, its your house but you give yourself some rules.
Explanation: