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Senators Beholden to the People
Senators Beholden to the People
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Senators Beholden to the People

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The American Republic's founders debated whether to have a government based on direct democracy (in which the general population decided public policy questions, as in a New England town meeting) or representative democracy (in which those decisions were made by senators and congressmen on behalf of the general population). A related issue was whether the general population should have the "e;right of instruction"e; which gave citizens authority to expel from office government officials who disobeyed the desires of the population. The right of instruction is now largely forgotten but in former times was considered so important that it was routinely included in state constitutions. This book examines the competition between direct democracy and representative democracy in the United States, focusing particularly on the doctrine of instruction, through the lens of the pre-presidential career of Abraham Lincoln.
Undertittel
Lincoln and the Doctrine of Instruction
ISBN
9781476650906
Språk
Engelsk
Utgivelsesdato
17.11.2023
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  • Epub - Adobe DRM
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