Republic

Republic

A republic is a form of government that has the following characteristics.

In republics, the Head of State is elected through elections.

The president and government of the republic rule the state.

The supreme head of a republic is called the president and the head of the government, the prime minister.

The President remains in his/her position for a specified period, never for life, and it is not a hereditary position.

  • The people elect the president directly and through universal suffrage, as in France.
  • The party that secures a majority from among the members of parliament elected by the people chooses the prime minister, as in Spain.
  • In the United States of America, for example, the people elect their delegates in each individual state in the union, and the delegates then elect the president.

The President is not only the supreme representative of the State, he/she is also the head of government or Executive power. The power of the president varies from one republic to another.

Each constitution stipulates how long the same person can be head of government, head of the republic or prime minister, how long this period can be and for how many legislative periods.

Dictatorship

Dictatorship, is the political structure where a person or a single group of people of the same ideology has the absolut power. In this cases the three political powers ( legislative, Executive power, judicial ) are controlled by the same person or group.

Dictatorships can obtain power in different ways. Often they obtain the power after a coup d’etat but sometimes they are also elected or named by the single party.

In a dictatorship, the head of state and government is not change or maintain by secret, direct and free universal sufrage. In this cases, even when the dictator obtains the power through elections ( like Adolf Hitler), in a short period, the dictator forbide the other political parties and following elections, even some times there can be some manipulated pseudo elections for propagandistic reasons. In these elections, the dictator is the only elector candidate and the he/she obtains very high results. 

Democracy

A democracy is a political setup that a human group accepts in order to live together and which comes into being when the sovereignty of a country is put into practice. The basic idea of a democracy is this: sovereignty is in the hands of the people and everyone is free and equal before the law. In other words, all the inhabitants, all the citizens have the same rights and obligations without any kind of distinction.

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he birth of democracy is linked to Greece, when the country’s men began to meet together to make decisions. Today, democracy is the most widespread political setup of states and the world’s main states are organised as democracies. The essential characteristic of this political system is individual freedom and people being free to choose their leaders through elections.

That has a direct consequence: everybody, all the citizens, have the right to participate in politics. One person, one vote: this is the characteristic of equality. Democracy and freedom, too, go hand in hand. The civil, political and social rights enjoyed by citizens have become the basis of modern democratic society. But nowadays, because it is impossible for all the citizens to participate in all the decisions, most democratic systems function by means of representation. This is called representative democracy. Therefore, people participate mainly through these representatives. These representatives are organised into political parties. In some special situations the people themselves, in other words, all the inhabitants, decide directly: in referendums…

Democracy is also based on the following: division of powers and constitution

Division of powers

The division of powers is the way of dividing and organising the functions of the State. In this system, each main function is assigned to a different public institution. The division of powers, one of the main features of modern states, means that the power is divided into three powers: the legislative power, the Executive power (or government) and the Judicial  power.

  • Legislative power

The parliament that is directly chosen by the people is the legislative power or legislative power. It may be organised as a single chamber (like the Parliament of the BAC-Basque Autonomous Community) or as two chambers (the Spanish Congress and Senate).

The main tasks of the legislative power are to approve, reject or amend laws, impose taxes, debate and clarify political issues and control the government itself, taking the views of the citizens into consideration at all times.

  • Executive power

The party that wins a majority of seats in the parliament forms a government and is regarded as executing the will of the people. It is responsible for the everyday running of the State. Its main functions are to direct internal and external policies, to ensure that laws are enforced, to guarantee defence, basic services, etc.

In democratic states the Executive power is usually that of a single person: the head of government, the president, the prime minister, the chancellor, etc.

  • Judicial  power

The Judicial  power is responsible for the legal system of a country. It decides whether laws are being obeyed or broken, and guarantees the rights of citizens. That is why it is separate from the other two powers to ensure total freedom. Judges are responsible for guaranteeing judicial power.

Statute of Autonomy

The rules governing each autonomous community are set out in the corresponding Statute, and the Statute of Autonomy itself is the collection of laws or legislation that governs the autonomous community.

It functions as a constitution for an autonomous region inside the main State.

The name, borders, language, institution names, organisation and powers are strictly and specifically spelt out in the Statute of Autonomy.

On the basis of the 1978 Constitution, 17 autonomous communities that make up the nations and countries of the Spanish State were set up, and the powers were divided between the autonomous communities and the central government.

The parliament in the autonomous communities has only one chamber. Spain is like some decentralised states in Europe, similar to Germany and Italy.

The names of these chambers vary in the Statutes of each Autonomous Community: Parliament, Provincial Assembles, Regional Assembly, Assembly, General Council, “Cortes”, etc… The reason for the different names can be found in the historical bases.

Local representatives of the autonomous community meet in the provincial parliaments. They choose the president. So, the members can pass a vote of no-confidence, just as they can in the Congress against the Spanish Prime Minister.

The members of these parliaments are mostly referred to as autonomous community members of parliament. The largest number of them is 135 (in Catalonia) and the smallest, 35 (in Cantabria and La Rioja); they are all elected through universal suffrage from among those who are registered in the autonomous community.

The most important functions of the autonomous community parliament are as follows: to represent the community, to approve the budgets of each community or region, to support and monitor the work of the Executive power, and pass laws in the areas in which it has powers. The powers are not the same in all of them: some autonomous communities have greater powers than other.

Once again, the autonomous community laws, like those of the State, can be examined by the Constitutional Court. 

Traditional farming

Traditional farming system is technically and technologically primitive. The land is farmed to provide sustenance; everything that is produced is needed for survival (subsistence).

One fifth of the world farms in this manner, constituting the largest part of world agriculture. Today it is rare for people to live from hunting and fruit gathering. There are also few people whose occupation is nomadic agriculture and animal husbandry.

Characteristics of traditional  agriculture:

  • Extensive farming with simple tools and crops
  • Basic instruments: axe, hoe, stick.
  • Methods: burn the plants in a field and sow in the ashes.
  • Cattle raisin helps to create fallow land.
  • In the absence of private property, public or communal land predominates.
  • There is no surplus production.

The number of self-sufficient, family farms is diminishing in the developed countries, but this is not the case in developing countries in Africa and Asia. Nomadic herders are still found in the south of the Sahara Desert in Africa, and across Afghanistan and Lapland. Sheep herding is an important occupation in some areas, such as Mongolia, as a complement to agriculture.

Another form of traditional farming is the intensive farmed rice paddy, of great importance in Southeast Asia. Rice is the most widely planted cereal. Most species require high soil humidity during growth. Rice is cultivated in Asia, South America, Africa, the United States, southern Europe and elsewhere.

Industrial Revolutions

The First Industrial Revolution

The First Industrial Revolution occurred almost exclusively in England, the Second Industrial Revolution spread to other European countries and to other countries  (the USA and Japan exclusively), and theThird Industrial Revolution – that took place in the middle of the 20th century. This final one spread industrialisation to the ex-colonies and changed the industrial typology in the advanced countries (Europe, the USA…), due to the appearance of the computer.

The 1st Industrial Revolution was based initially on the development of the English textile industry carried out by non-organised factory workers. Before the 18th century, cloth-making was based on the Domestic System. But when the population of England began to increase rapidly in the 18th century, there was an increased need for the production of cloth, usually made from imported cotton from India.

Many inventions accelerated cotton production, producing more and producing more cheaply. The biggest innovation of all was James Watt’s Steam Engine (1786), applying steam power to the cotton mills. This truly converted England into the “workshop of the world”.  Another important aspect of the 1st Industrial Revolution was coal, because steam could be produced by burning coal.

This fundamental shift in power source and use had enormous consequences. Without this shift the world would not have developed as it has done. Without the steam engine, coal could not have been extracted easily, but then the steam engine was applied to the invention of cotton mills, steam ships, trains, steam tractors, and furnaces for making iron and steel. The development of the steam engine changed the shape of society. Because mills or factories did not have to be located near to water

The Second Industrial Revolution

The 2nd Revolution saw a basic shift in the main industrial power source. In terms of cause and effect, we can say that as machines multiplied, more energy was needed. The workforce was mainly qualified and organised by Trade Unions. The coal available was insufficient, and so it was gradually replaced by petrol. The car was invented, and so demand for petrol rose. This caused a revolution in transport, which in turn stimulated new industries and commerce. Steel, for example, was needed for machines, railways, ships, cars, iron buildings etc. As more industrial regions and factories grew, there was a new need for extra finance (capital) which resulted in the growth of banking. With regard to electricity, the principles of electric generation had been established by the Englishman Michael Faraday in 1831, but it was not until 1879 that the American Thomas Edison invented a light bulb. The same year, the first commercial power station was opened in San Francisco. After various electrical domestic inventions in the early 1900s (oven, vacuum cleaner, washing machine) the developed world changed in a radical way.

In fact, a significant characteristic of the 2nd Industrial Revolution was the emergence of the USA and Germany as the new industrial powers to compete with Great Britain. In 1870, when the German state was effectively created, the Rhine and the Ruhr valleys were rich in coal. This stimulated the iron and steel industry, but also the chemical industry, originally based on synthetic dyes and aspirin. The Bayer company became the main protagonist, and by the end of the 19th century Germany was the world leader in the chemical industry, establishing factories across the world.

The Basque Industrialisation

Industrialisation was an important event in the history of the Basque Country, but this neither happened everywhere nor at the same time. Nevertheless, there were some common characteristics. The Industrial Revolution was slow in developing, and began in the middle of the 19th century in Biscay, at the end of the 19th in Gipuzkoa and in the middle of the 20th in Araba and Navarre.

Biscay began to develop rapidly with the incorporation of foreign capital, expansion of the ports, expansion of a new banking network and a new infrastructure with the expansion of the railway. The first modern iron factory in the Basque Country, Santa Ana de Bolueta, S.A. was founded in 1841 and by 1859 there was an Altos Hornos in Barakaldo, and almost immediately the whole Bilbao zone was industrialised. By 1870, Biscay was Europe’s biggest exporter of iron-ore. The iron exports and railway companies also made certain members of the Biscayan industrial bourgeoisie very rich and powerful. This stimulated mercantile activity and the end of the century saw the creation of important shipyards in Sestao (Astilleros de Sestao, Euskalduna de Construcción y Reparación de Buques) and in 1902 the creation of Altos Hornos de Vizcaya, a large and important steelworks. Up to the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th, many people from other Basque lands and other Spanish territories moved to the major industrial areas of Biscay.

In Gipuzkoa, industrialisation developed differently. There were some iron-based industries, but other related industries also appeared in different areas of Gipuzkoa. Although most of the industries were created from the end of 19th century, some industries were founded in the middle of the 19th century – such as the textile industries of Bergara –1846 Algodonera San Antonio, the paper factories near Oria-1841 La Esperanza in Tolosa, and – Fábrica de Trenes San Martín in Beasain in 1860, the predecessor of CAF (Compañía Auxiliar de Ferrocarril). In the 20th century, La Papelera Española (1902) was founded in Errenteria. In 1906 the Unión Cerrajera in Arrasate was founded, and in 1920 Alfa to make sewing machines. These factories were generally quite small, created with local capital and the workers were from Gipuzkoa.

In Araba and Navarre, and particularly in the Northern Basque Country, industrialisation didn’t begin until middle of the 20th. The exception was the iron ore Forge de l’Adour founded in Bayonne in 1884, that used iron from Biscay and English coke.

Plantation farming

Plantation farming is a form of agriculture practised in or near tropics which originated in colonial times.

The first plantations date from the seventeenth century and existed in the southern USA, Caribbean states, Central and South America.

At first, white labour was used, but later this was replaced by black slaves, who were cheaper. Nowadays wage labourers work on the plantations and large land properties. Crops produced on the plantation are destined for markets; they use single-crop farming techniques such as cocoa, cotton or coffee, but also grow local crops such as bananas, dates, etc.

Plantations are managed like a business, whose goal is the production and marketing of goods. The workers are wage earners with fixed working hours. However, in some places workers still live in conditions similar to the era of slavery.

Single-crop farming creates problems because the product depends on international fluctuations in market prices.

We also call this kind of agriculture speculative farming. If a country depends too much on market fluctuations, this can impede its economic progression.