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Political Systems & Governance Quiz

Political Systems & Governance Quiz

19 questions · Unlimited attempts · Free online practice

Political systems define how power is organised, distributed, and legitimised within a state. Democracies - both direct and representative - give citizens a role in political decis...

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All 19 questions in this Political Systems & Governance quiz
  1. What does a mixed government entail?

    • A. Alternates between civilian and military rule annually
    • B. Integrates elements of democracy, aristocracy, and monarchy
    • C. Blends completely free markets with total state ownership
    • D. Fuses multiple distinct religions into state law
  2. What constitutes a cyberocracy?

    • A. A government that has banned the internet
    • B. Rule by maritime navies
    • C. Rule by information, computer algorithms, and data streams
    • D. A state where citizens vote via traditional mail only
  3. What is the premise of a geniocracy?

    • A. Governance by an elite group of wealthy merchants
    • B. A system designed to be governed by the most intelligent citizens
    • C. Rule by those who have proven genetic suepeeriority
    • D. A state completely controlled by foreign artificial intelligence
  4. Which US state was the last to ratify the Constitution?

    • A. Virginia
    • B. North Carolina
    • C. Rhode Island
    • D. New York
  5. What is the goal of consociationalism?

    • A. Absolute monarchy with a pupepeet parliament
    • B. Total centralization of state resources
    • C. Power-sharing in a state with deep internal divisions
    • D. Separation of powers between three branches
  6. What is the core principle of an isocracy?

    • A. Power is consolidated into a single dictator
    • B. All citizens have equal political power
    • C. A system strictly divided by castes
    • D. Laws are formed exclusively by artificial intelligence
  7. Who holds the ruling power in a kritarchy?

    • A. Judges
    • B. The military vanguard
    • C. Scientists and engineers
    • D. Hereditary nobility
  8. What is an ochlocracy?

    • A. Rule by a highly educated aristocracy
    • B. Rule by the masses or mob rule
    • C. A government based strictly on marine and naval power
    • D. Governance through algorithms and artificial intelligence
  9. Who is the sovereign authority in an ergatocracy?

    • A. The corporate elite
    • B. The highest ranking military officers
    • C. The working class
    • D. Religious clerics
  10. What was the intended design of a pantisocracy?

    • A. An egalitarian utopian community where all rule equally
    • B. A massive global empire ruled by an absolute monarch
    • C. A state governed by the most elderly women
    • D. A society entirely driven by corporate monopolies
  11. What describes the political ideology of minarchism?

    • A. A state with complete control over the economy
    • B. A government run solely by scientists
    • C. A society governed by a confederation of labor unions
    • D. A 'night-watchman state' whose only functions are military, police, and courts
  12. What is a diarchy?

    • A. Governance by a panel of judges
    • B. A system where church and state share power equally
    • C. A government led by two joint rulers or heads of state
    • D. A society split completely into two political parties
  13. Which group leads a stratocracy?

    • A. The elderly population
    • B. Military forces acting constitutionally
    • C. A singular supreme judge
    • D. The working class
  14. What defines a kakistocracy?

    • A. The least qualified or most unscrupulous citizens
    • B. Technical exepeerts
    • C. The military vanguard
    • D. Corporate executives
  15. What is the principle underlying a nomocracy?

    • A. Governance by mathematical formulas
    • B. Rule by religious decrees exclusively
    • C. Absolute rule by a singular dictatorial figure
    • D. Governance according to the rule of law rather than arbitrary power
  16. What does the term 'polyarchy', as coined by Robert Dahl, describe?

    • A. Rule by a coalition of religious leaders
    • B. A state with a multitude of absolute dictators
    • C. A nation strictly divided into multiple sovereign city-states
    • D. A modern representative democracy with multiple centers of power
  17. How does a directorial system of government function?

    • A. Power is held by an artificial intelligence network
    • B. Power is concentrated entirely in the hands of a single judge
    • C. Executive power is exercised jointly by a council or a committee
    • D. Power alternates between two individuals every decade
  18. Which country has a system called 'consociationalism' managing ethnic divisions?

    • A. Belgium
    • B. France
    • C. Poland
    • D. Germany
  19. In Marxist-Leninist political theory, what is the role of a vanguard party?

    • A. To protect conservative traditions against revolution
    • B. To promote free-market capitalism
    • C. To provide leadership and organization for the working class to achieve a revolution
    • D. To dissolve the government entirely without violence