Dictionary:
di·ar·chy dy·ar·chy (dī'är'kē) ![]() |
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| Political Dictionary: dyarchy |
System of dual rule, whereby government functions are shared between two bodies. Dyarchy was introduced in India between 1919 and 1935, with governmental functions divided between Provincial legislatures and the Governor's Executive Council. It proved unpopular, with disputes regarding overlapping functions and a lack of accountability. In Northern Ireland a different form of dyarchy has been in operation since 1998. The devolved government established after the Belfast Agreement has a system whereby the Assembly elects two leaders, one from each of the two main communities. These two leaders have identical powers (although called First Minister and Deputy First Minister) and serve jointly; if one ceases to hold office so must the other. In such a way it is hoped that both unionists and nationalists can be seen to have a share in the leadership of the devolved government.
— Alistair McMillan
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| WordNet: diarchy |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
an autocracy governed by two rulers
Synonym: dyarchy
| Wikipedia: Diarchy |
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Diarchy (or dyarchy), from the Greek "δύο", and αρχειν, "to rule," is a form of government in which two diarchs are the heads of state. In most diarchies, the diarchs hold their position for life and pass the responsibilities and power of the position to their children or family when they die.
The diarchy is one of the oldest types of government and has been in existence for centuries. Diarchies are known from ancient Sparta, Rome, Carthage as well as from Germanic and Dacian tribes. Several ancient Polynesian societies exhibited a diarchic political structure as well. Ranks in the Inca Empire were structured in moieties, with two occupants of each rank, but with different prestige, one hanan (upper) and one hurin (lower). In modern usage diarchy means a system of dual rule, whether this be of a government or of an organisation. Such 'diarchies' are not hereditary.
Examples of modern forms are the governments of San Marino and Northern Ireland. The Montagu-Chelmsford reforms of British India prescribed a "dyarchy" of ministers who were individually responsible to the legislature, and the Australian Defence Organisation operates as a diarchy. Andorra is the only present country to retain two diarchs, known as co-princes, as head of state.
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Andorra is a co-principality. The Diarchs are the President of France and the Bishop of Urgell. The current co-princes are Nicolas Sarkozy and Joan Enric Vives Sicília respectively.
The Roman Republic was ruled by two consuls, elected each year and each holding a veto power over the other's actions.
The Australian Defence Organisation (ADO) is an Australian Government organisation which consists of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) and the civilian Department of Defence personnel supporting the ADF. The Chief of the Defence Force and the Secretary of the Department of Defence jointly manage the ADO under a "diarchy", a term used to describe the relationship between the Chief of the Defence Force and the Secretary, both of whom report directly to the Minister for Defence. The ADO diarchy is a governance structure unique in the Australian Commonwealth public service.
Due to shaky governments due to the coalition governments in the recent past, Diarchies have been both successfully and unsuccessfully tested in India. Some successful examples include the current government in Jammu and Kashmir and Karnataka. A failed one was in 1995 in Uttar Pradesh between the BSP and the BJP.[1]
Diarchia is also the name applied to the form of government during the fascist period in Italy when King Victor Emmanuel III was still in office as head of state but all power was in the hands of Benito Mussolini.
The positions First Minister and deputy First Minister operate as a diarchy and have done so since 1998. The devolved government of Northern Ireland established after the Belfast Agreement in 1998 has a system whereby the Assembly elects two leaders, one from each of the two main communities. These two leaders actually have identical powers even though they are called First Minister and Deputy First Minister respectively and serve jointly.
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| Chitta Ranjan Das | |
| Rufus Daniel Isaacs, 1st Marquess of Reading | |
| decolonization |
| What is a diarchy? |
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