the law.
Besides the US, The United Kingdom, France, Germany, Sweden, the Netherlands, Mexico, Canada, and many other countries are representative democracies.
A common definition of “republic” is, to quote the American Heritage Dictionary, “A political order in which the supreme power lies in a body of citizens who are entitled to vote for officers and representatives responsible to them”
Answer this question… A. In modern representative democracies, all citizens have the obligation to craft laws and the responsibility to follow those laws. B. Certain citizens of modern representative democracies are obligated to craft laws, while the rest of the citizens are obligated to follow those laws. C. All citizens of modern representative democracies have the right to vote and craft laws, but not all citizens are obligated to follow those laws. D. In modern representative democracies, citizens have the right to run for office in order to craft laws and the responsibility to follow those laws.
Virtually all democracies in the world are examples of representative governments. One specific representative government is the US. There, elected officials represent the opinions of the public.
Who is in charge of a country depends on which country we are speaking about; there are numerous countries that are representative democracies. The head of the US is the President, while the head of the UK is split between the Queen and the Prime Minister.
No our United States is a combanation and not one democracy.
Many countries that have democratically elected governments practice representative democracy. Countries like the US, the UK and most of the western countries practice representative democracy.
Both are democracies.
The United States is a representative republic, not a direct democracy, as a result, the question is unanswerable. As for how the US became a representative republic, this was through the approval of the US Constitution of 1789, which is still in power today.
Democracies.
representative democracy representative democracy
Who are the current us representative of newjersey