There are no political freedom in monarchy. It has a king who does what he wants and then there is everybody else.
There are no political freedom in monarchy. It has a king who does what he wants and then there is everybody else.
constitutional monarchy :)
The government is a elective constitutional monarchy. This means there is a prime minister and a monarchy at the head of state. Yet, the country has been rated as an authoritarian country. In 1997 coup overturned the government and analysts say the rule of law and freedoms have not taken hold. So, to answer this question I would say there are no freedoms at this time.
In an absolute monarchy, the liberty and freedom of the monarch are absolute, and the liberty and freedom of the subjects of the monarch are whatever the monarch chooses to give them.
This idea is called social contract theory. It suggests that individuals implicitly agree to give up certain freedoms to a governing authority in exchange for protection and the maintenance of social order.
Thomas Hobbes believed that individuals should be willing to give up some personal freedoms in exchange for protection and security provided by a strong central authority, typically the government. He argued that without this social contract, life would be "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short" due to human nature being inherently selfish and focused on self-preservation. His ideas emphasized the importance of order and stability in society over individual liberties.
monarchy- all power under king and no freedom of peoples
decreased the power of Louis XVILed to the creation of the Legislative Assembly
He wanted to see a new country where the citizens and not a monarchy had say in what would happen, what freedoms there would be and what taxes would be paid.
Morocco has a Unitary parliamentary constitutional hereditary monarchy. Their current king is Mohammed VI and their current prime minister is Abdelilah Benkirane.However, most power is concentrated in the monarch, not the parliament.Morrocco is a constitutional monarchy where the King has no real political power BUT the current government allows limited democracy, with limits on freedoms.
No. In a democracy the restriction of freedoms should never be an issue. If this happens, it will cease to be a democracy.