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1.2 Defining Political Institutions

2 min readβ€’june 18, 2024

Kelly Cotton

Kelly Cotton

Isabela Padilha

Isabela Padilha


AP Comparative GovernmentΒ πŸ—³οΈ

90Β resources
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Unit 1 - Defining Political Institutions

Vocab anyone?! This topic is all about vocabulary. At the end of this topic you'll need to know the different ways that political institutions are defined. Do not forget as we go over the different institutions that they represent the power dynamics between the government and the people. So here we go!

Topic 1.2 Terms

  • Political Systemsβ€”The laws πŸ“œ, the ideas πŸ’‘, and the procedures that decide who has the authority to rule and what the government's influence should be politically and economically.
  • Statesβ€”Political organizations that combine a permanent population with governing institutions in a defined territory with international recognition.
  • Regimeβ€”A group in power who exercises power. Can be democratic πŸ™‹πŸΎβ€β™€οΈ or authoritarian πŸ‘‘
  • Governmentβ€”The institutions and individuals allowed to make legally binding decisions for a state.
  • Nationβ€”A group of people with items in common like language πŸ—£οΈ, race πŸ‘¦πŸΌπŸ‘¦πŸ½πŸ‘¦πŸ», or religion β˜ͺ️.
Definitions are the key πŸ”‘ to success in this class. You can't compare countries if you don't understand the terms and ways in which you are being asked to compare them. The College Board also wants you to show that you can explain and analyze! That means being able to discuss what a political system looks like in the countries of study. Here's a chart to help.




πŸ‘Έ Institution Examples

TermUK - ExamplesRussia - ExamplesChina - ExamplesIran - ExamplesMexico - ExamplesNigeria-Examples
Political SystemDemocracyConstitution AuthoritarianCCP and/or AuthoritarianTheocracy and/or AuthoritarianConstitutional DemocracyConstitutional Democracy
StateUKRussiaChinaIranMexicoNigeria
RegimeDemocraticAuthoritarianAuthoritarianAuthoritarianEmerging DemocracyEmerging Democracy
GovernmentUnitary, but turning more federalFederal but asymmetricUnitaryUnitaryFederalFederal
NationScottish, IrishRussian, ChechanHan Chinese, TibetansPersians, AzerisMestizoHausa, Yoruba
This topic is all about providing you with a way to define political institutions. The rest of the unit will have you break each of these down in more detail and begin to examine each in the course countries.

πŸ’‘For the AP Exam you will have to know the difference between all of these institutions very clearly. A good way to approach it is to think what each institution does in terms of power πŸ‘‘. For instance, political sytems determine who has the authority to rule. A nation, on the other hand, does not necessarily have power implications since it exists through a commonality between people, including but not limited to language, aspirations, ethnicity, etc.


Essential connections: πŸ”
  • A state consists of the combination of a population and the governmental system of a nation
  • A government's authority derives from the state's legitimacy to exercise power
  • A regime does not change after a transition of government. Regimes are supposed to be enduring.


Browse Study Guides By Unit
πŸ‘‘Unit 1 – Political Systems, Regimes, & Governments
βš–οΈUnit 2 – Political Institutions
πŸ™‹β€β™€οΈUnit 3 – Political Culture & Participation
🐘Unit 4 – Party, Electoral Systems, & Citizen Organizations
πŸ—Unit 5 – Political & Economic Changes & Development
πŸ€”Exam Skills
πŸ“šStudy Tools

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