QUESTION IMAGE
Question
in switzerland, citizens elect representatives who lead the government in two separate branches (groups). citizens vote in their own groups and propose, decide on, and remove laws directly. this is written into switzerlands laws. all, some, or one? do you think peoples rights are protected here? why or why not? in japan, the government is led by two heads of state. an emperor born into the position and a prime minister who is elected by the people. all citizens elect representatives who make laws. elected representatives are expected to listen to the demands of the citizens who elected them all, some, or one? do you think peoples rights are protected here? why or why not? from 1933 to 1945, germany was led and controlled by a fascist regime (group in power). adolf hitler had total control over nazi germanys laws and chose its lawmakers. citizens were under strict control and did not have real elections. many citizens had restrictions on their activities and movements, particularly jewish people, disabled people, and non - ethnic germans. all, some, or one? do you think peoples rights are protected here? why or why not? in ancient athens, the government was run by all who were considered citizens. they voted, proposed laws, and made decisions in large groups called assemblies. all citizens had a voice and were expected to participate in government, but only a small number of people were considered citizens. all, some, or one? do you think peoples rights are protected here? why or why not?
- Switzerland: All citizens can vote, propose, decide on, and remove laws directly, so rights of all are protected.
- Japan: All citizens elect representatives, but the emperor has a non - elected position. Still, as citizens can elect representatives and representatives are expected to listen to them, rights of all are somewhat protected.
- Nazi Germany (1933 - 1945): Many groups like Jews, disabled, and non - ethnic Germans had their rights severely restricted, so only rights of some (the favored groups) were protected.
- Ancient Athens: Only a small number were considered citizens and could participate in government, so rights of some were protected.
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
- Switzerland: ALL. Citizens have direct democratic rights in law - making and governance.
- Japan: ALL. Citizens elect representatives and have a say through them.
- Nazi Germany (1933 - 1945): SOME. Only certain groups had rights protected.
- Ancient Athens: SOME. Only a select group of citizens had political rights.