how have the six basic principles that are in the U.S. Constitution allowed the U.S. Constitution to continue to provide the framework for our government for like over two hundred years?
the six basic principles being:
popular sovereignty, limited government, separation of powers, checks and balances, judicial review, and federalism.
Solon was chosen to design a system for Athens (which would eventually become democracy under Cleisthenes) because at the time, indebted Athenians were being sold into slavery and resentment for the upper class amongst poor people were building and the aristocrats feared a revolution. Solon was chosen because he was both of aristocratic birth and trusted by the common Athenians, acting as the link between both.
The more education that everyone has the smarter they will be and they will make the society better.
Civic Education in a democracy is education in self government. Democratic self government means that citizens are actively involved in their own governance; they do not just passively accept the dictums of others or acquiesce to the demands of others. As Aristotle put it in his Politics (c 340 BC), "If liberty and equality, as is thought by some, are chiefly to be found in democracy, they will be attained when all persons alike share in the government to the utmost." In other words, the ideals of democracy are most completely realized when every member of the political community shares in its governance. Members of the political community are its citizens, hence citizenship in a democracy is membership in the body politic. Membership implies participation, but not participation for participation's sake. Citizen participation in a democratic society must be based on informed, critical reflection, and on the understanding and acceptance of the rights and responsibilities that go with that membership.
Answer:
Trade unions in Africa have received a great deal of attention from various labour analysts, especially in regard to their contributions to the struggles against neoliberalism during the harsh time of structural adjustment programs. The kingdom of Swaziland (recently renamed as Eswatini) has constantly been faced with persistent labour unrests associated with increased demands for democratic openness (Simelane, 2016).
Locating trade union activism along these lines suggests that unions are neither delinked from the state nor regional or global institutions. Thus, as a way of consolidating their strategies, they make use of various public spaces, either at the local or international level to raise their grievances and issues. Like most of the civil society organisations, they can demonstrate leverage (capacity and power) to engage institutions at different geographical levels. This engagement shapes their strategies and practices as well as the various roles that trade union actors play in regional governance.