To a certain degree, yes... I think so.
No , i don't think parliamentary form of democracy has failed in India
Our system grew out of the British systems. A Representative democracy worked well in their class based society in which the "people" were not thought of as worthy or intelligent enough to represent themselves. Another reason is size. Today direct democracy for large populations is technically easy to accomplish. That was not the case in the past. Direct democracy failed when populations were large and issues complex. Representative democracy scales nicely.
Democracy survived in some countries due to factors such as strong institutions, a vibrant civil society, and a culture of political compromise. In contrast, democracy failed in other countries due to issues like corruption, weak institutions, and lack of respect for the rule of law.
The dude from the website you got the quote from.
Fragile national solidarity is one explanation given for why democracy failed in Pakistan. Another is the incredible power and influence of the military.
an attemp at a utopian society which failed
Monarchy, oligarchy, tyranny, democracy, radical democracy.
You didn't - You failed to
It failed to reduce the problem of alcohol abuse and it created numerous serious problems for individuals and society.
The Republic of Zambia has not yet failed in becoming a democratic nation. There is some doubts about a new constitution, however, there is optimism that it will usher in a true democratic type government.ANS 2 - Zambia has most definitely failed to become a proper democracy. There is no adequate voice for the common people and the majority of the so called leaders are interested mainly in lining their own bank accounts.
He failed to provide a successor to his throne.
No. In Germany, as in many European countries, democracy failed in the interwar period. In Germany (unlike, say, Italy) the dictatorship that came to power was antisemitic, but that doesn't make democracy or failed democracy a cause of the Holocaust.(In the late 1940s the view that 'democracy caused Nazism' was popular among some ultra-conservative hardliners in Germany, who equated democracy with 'mob rule').