A government is a group of people that have the power to rule in a territory, according to the administrative law. This territory may be a country, a state or province within a country, or a region. ... Governments make laws, rules, and regulations, collect taxes and print money.
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There are four major theories
of how government originates: evolutionary, force, divine right, and social
contract.
According to evolutionary theory, government
originates from a family or clan-bound structure, which can explain the
formation of the world's first political structures. These earliest and very
loosely formed governments were the result of a shift from hunter-gatherer
societies to more settled agricultural societies. As families joined to form
clans and clans joined to form villages, the need for leaders and a central
organizational structure developed. These leaders helped determine how to
address still unfamiliar issues, such as water rights for crop irrigation and
the distribution of other resources. They also provided an increased sense of
safety and security for the society. In many early societies, these first
states developed monarchies, with rule based on membership in a ruling family.
In modern times, some governments continue to be led by a succession of members
from the same family. For example, in the monarchy of Saudi Arabia, the king
has been descended from the Āl Saʿūd family since 1744.
The force theory is the idea that government
originates from taking control of the state by force and is often found in
a dictatorship—a type of government characterized by one-person or
one-party authoritarian rule. Historically, this has been achieved in some
cases through forcible invasion or occupation when a more dominant people or
state takes control of the political system of a less powerful people or state,
imposing its governmental system on that group. New governments can also be
formed by force during revolutions or coups within a country. A coup is the
overthrow of an established government, and the resulting leader or dictator is
most often a military figure. An example of the force theory occurred in Cuba
in 1959, when revolutionary Fidel Castro and a small force of guerrilla
soldiers defeated the national army and took control of the government. In some
cases, governments created by force take on some characteristics of a monarchy,
with government power handed down within the dictator's family. Examples are
the Assad regime in Syria and the Kim regime in North Korea.
With the divine right theory, government originates
with power vested in an individual by God or gods. Generally, monarchs lead
governments of this type. This theory was followed in ancient times, including
by the ancient Egyptians and Maya. The idea of divine right experienced a
resurgence in western Europe in the 16th to the 18th centuries, when King James
I of England, several French monarchs, and other rulers asserted that their
authority came directly from God—and thus could not be challenged. Russian
czars, such as Peter the Great, believed their autocratic rule was God-given,
and they used their power to gain territory, wage war, and impose taxation on
their subjects.
The social contract theory of government was
the result of centuries of frustration with the unchecked power of monarchs.
Under this theory, government is a kind of contract in which those in power
have responsibility toward those they govern and the governed respect the power
of the governing individuals. There are various versions of the social contract
theory, ranging from an emphasis on maintaining a peaceful social order to a
focus on using individual free will to determine what is best for the public
good, or that which benefits all people in a society. Although the social
contract theory has numerous variations, at its core is the idea that
government is an agreement between those who govern and those who are governed.
The founders of the United States drew heavily on social contract theory in the
construction of both the Declaration of Independence and the U.S.
Constitution. In doing so, they formed a democracy, which literally means
"rule by the people
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