Britain: 1760-1900: Democracy

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Mind Map on Britain: 1760-1900: Democracy, created by quackquackrubberduck on 23/04/2015.
quackquackrubberduck
Mind Map by quackquackrubberduck, updated more than 1 year ago More Less
Lewis White
Created by Lewis White about 9 years ago
quackquackrubberduck
Copied by quackquackrubberduck about 9 years ago
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Resource summary

Britain: 1760-1900: Democracy
  1. What is Democracy?
    1. Government of the people, for the people, by the people
      1. A type of Government that is elected by the people
        1. To be democractic a country must be
          1. Right to vote
            1. Choice
              1. Access to information
                1. Participation
                  1. Fairness
                    1. Accountability of voters
                  2. Is Britain a true Democracy?
                    1. Today
                      1. YES!!!
                      2. 1760?
                        1. NO!!!
                          1. Why?
                            1. Many people were not allowed to vote
                              1. Britain was ruled by rich land owners who controlled the Government
                                1. Bribery and corruption were common in voting
                                  1. Some areas of Britain hap no representitives!
                                    1. Voting done in public, no secret ballot
                              2. How many people could vote?
                                1. Only 1 in 50 people could vote!
                                2. The landowners would bribe or beat men to vote for their MP(s)
                                  1. This meant that the landowners had...
                                    1. MP(s) to represent them
                                      1. and the votes to get them in Parliament
                                    2. The Government represented the land of Britain, not the people
                                      1. e.g. Old Sarum was a hill on which no one lived
                                        1. Two MPs were sent from there every year
                                          1. Places like this were known as Rotten bouroughs
                                        2. e.g. Industrial towns such as Manchester and Birmingham had no one to represent them
                                          1. Thousands of people lived in these towns!
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