judicial
Political doctrine that allowed the settlers of U.S. federal territories to decide whether to enter the Union as free or slave states. It was applied by Sen. stephen-a-douglasas a means to reach a compromise through passage of the kansas-nebraska-act. Critics of the doctrine called it "squatter sovereignty." The resulting violence between pro- and antislavery factions (see bleeding-kansas) showed its failure as a workable compromise.Read more: popular-sovereignty
It means that the U.S. is a federation of sovereign states who have delegated some of their sovereignty to a central government (the federal government).
It means that the U.S. is a federation of sovereign states who have delegated some of their sovereignty to a central government (the federal government).
It means that the U.S. is a federation of sovereign states who have delegated some of their sovereignty to a central government (the federal government).
Popular sovereignty is a doctrine that power come from the people and those who rule them must rule in conformity with them. Sovereignty means supreme or ultimate political authority. A sovereign government is one that is legally/politically independent of any other government.
Popular sovereignty
nominal sovereignty is the authority to only rule in name where substantial sovereignty or dominant sovereignty means real or actual authority
Popular sovereignty means people have a voice in the government and this means they have a voice to vote in the government
The people rule
The people rule
A palindrome for "DOCTRINE" is "ENIRTCDOD."
The archipelago doctrine is a principle in international law that pertains to the rights of archipelagic states, which are nations composed of a group of islands. According to this doctrine, these states can claim sovereignty over the waters enclosed by their islands, allowing them to establish baselines that define their territorial sea. This concept is important for managing maritime boundaries, resources, and navigation rights within and around archipelagos. The doctrine is codified in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).