in which possess does voting right system fall?
Citizens were freeborn land owning males who were 21-years-old and older, both of whose parents were Athenian. Everyone else was denied citizenship.
The papal conclave system of voting is not based on anything Masonic. It has been in existence long before the Masons were founded.
The Athenian democratic system is still admired because it was a unique form of government. Athens used a direct democracy and instead of voting for officials to vote for the people, the Athenian people voted on bills and legislation themselves.
Only men, and they had to be locals (the immigrants had no rights) and free.
Assembly held each fortnight.
what to eat at the voting parties and who would get what as a job
- Citizenship alloted many privileges to the population of Athens - Voting in direct democracy, those giving them a chance to have a saying in everything other Athenians did
i want use case diagram for online voting system
Assembly held each fortnight.
No, Greece is the first model for modern democracy. More specifically the city of Athens. They were the first ones to allow voting and many parts of today's law system.
Athens had a democracy where citizens participated in decision-making through voting in the assembly and serving on juries, while Sparta had an oligarchy with two kings and a council of elders called the Gerousia that held significant power. Sparta also had a unique dual system with two kings sharing power.