What's the difference between
and
Enter two words to compare and contrast their definitions, origins, and synonyms to better understand how those words are related.

Panarchy vs Democracy - What's the difference?

panarchy | democracy |

As nouns the difference between panarchy and democracy

is that panarchy is the individual's right to choose any form of government without being forced to move from their current locale while democracy is (uncountable) rule by the people, especially as a form of government; either directly or through elected representatives (representative democracy).

panarchy

English

Noun

(panarchies)
  • The individual's right to choose any form of government without being forced to move from their current locale.
  • * 1860 article by “Panarchy” de Puydt
  • (systems theory) Dynamic symmetry across multiple scales.
  • *{{quote-book, 2001, Lance H. Gunderson and C. S. Holling, Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems, page=25 citation
  • , passage=In panarchies , transformational change can be generated from below or from above. }}
  • (diplomacy) An inclusive, multilateral system in which all parties may participate meaningfully.
  • *{{quote-book, 2006, W.A. Knight, Canada Among Nations, chapter=Plurilateral Multilateralism: Canada's Emerging International Policy?, editors=Andrew F. Cooper, Dane Rowlands citation
  • , passage=The overlapping governance networks of panarchy have facilitated a context conducive to the above competing multilateralisms.}}
  • (anarchism, rare) Rule by all; a system of governance in which each person has absolute power.
  • *{{quote-book, 2001, David Trend, Reading Digital Culture, page=148 citation
  • , passage=If everyone all at once wanted to know who won the Stanley Cup in 1968 they could have the information simultaneously; cyberspace as the site of Unamuno's panarchy , where each one is king.}}
  • (rare) Rule of all; absolute or total rule.
  • *{{quote-book, 1909, Samuel Eagle Forman, A Good Word for Democracy citation
  • , passage=These contentions give rise to systems of political philosophy which range all the way from anarchy to panarchy ; from the doctrine that government should do nothing to the doctrine that it should do everything.}}
  • (poetic, rare) An all-encompassing realm.
  • *{{quote-book, 1839, , Festus: A Poem citation
  • , passage=Some held that God, and all the heavenly powers, / As with the starry panarchy of space, / Were of one essence, like divine and high;}}

    References

    *Sewell and Salter, 1995, p.373

    democracy

    Noun

    (democracies)
  • (uncountable) Rule by the people, especially as a form of government; either directly or through elected representatives (representative democracy).
  • * 1866 , J. Arthur Partridge, On Democracy , Trübner & Co., page 2:
  • And the essential value and power of Democracy' consists in this,—that it combines, as far as possible, power and organization ; THE SPIRIT, MANHOOD, ''is at one with'' THE BODY, ORGANIZATION. [....] ' Democracy is Government by the People.
  • * 1901 , The American Historical Review , American Historical Association, page 260:
  • The period, that is, which marks the transition from absolutism or aristocracy to democracy will mark also the transition from absolutist or autocratic methods of nomination to democratic methods.
  • * 1921 , James Bryce Bryce, Modern Democracies , The Macmillan Company, page 1:
  • A century ago there was in the Old World only one tiny spot in which the working of democracy could be studied. A few of the ancient rural cantons of Switzerland had recovered their freedom after the fall of Napoleon, and were governing themselves as they had done from the earlier Middle Ages[...]. Nowhere else in Europe did the people rule.
  • * 1994 , Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom , Abacus 2010, p. 24:
  • Everyone who wanted to speak did so. It was democracy in its purest form.
  • (countable, government) A government under the direct or representative rule of the people of its jurisdiction.
  • * 2003 , Fareed Zakaria, The Future of Freedom: Illiberal Democracy at Home and Abroad , W. W. Norton & Company, page 13:
  • In 1900 not a single country had what we would today consider a democracy : a government created by elections in which every adult citizen could vote.
  • (uncountable) Belief in political freedom and equality; the "spirit of democracy".
  • * 1918 , Charles Horton Cooley, “A Primary Culture for Democracy”, in Publications of the American Sociological Society 13 , p8
  • As states of the human spirit democracy , righteousness, and faith have much in common and may be cultivated by the same means...
  • * 1919 , Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, The Spirit of Russia: Studies in History, Literature and Philosophy , Macmillan, p446
  • It must further be admitted that he provided a successful interpretation of democracy' in its philosophic aspects when he conceived '''democracy''' as a general outlook on the universe... In Bakunin's conception of ' democracy as religious in character we trace the influence of French socialism.
  • * 1996 , Petre Roman, The Spirit of Democracy and the Fabric of NATO - The New European Democracies and NATO Enlargement , p1
  • The spirit of democracy' means, above all, liberty of choice for human beings... ' democracy , in both its individual and collective forms, is the main engine of the eternal human striving for justice and prosperity.

    Synonyms

    * democratism (spirit of democracy)

    Coordinate terms

    * (a form of government) monarchy, aristocracy, dictatorship