Difference between revisions of "Charter/Terms"

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(Glossary)
(Glossary)
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; '''convention''' : assembly of individuals who meet to establish a charter or other foundation issues; tends to be very large
 
; '''convention''' : assembly of individuals who meet to establish a charter or other foundation issues; tends to be very large
 
; '''party''' : group within a convention who are agreed on a platform and work together to advance it; usually a large fraction of convention members
 
; '''party''' : group within a convention who are agreed on a platform and work together to advance it; usually a large fraction of convention members
; '''caucus''' : group within a convention who seek to find a common ground on some issues; often quite small
+
; '''[[What is a caucus|caucus]]''' : group within a convention who seek to find a common ground on some issues; often quite small
 
; '''platform''' : political agenda or plan of action
 
; '''platform''' : political agenda or plan of action
 
; '''plank''' : element, section, or clause of a platform
 
; '''plank''' : element, section, or clause of a platform
 
; '''charter''' : foundation document which controls all other documents, rules, and procedures governing a community; sometimes ''constitution''
 
; '''charter''' : foundation document which controls all other documents, rules, and procedures governing a community; sometimes ''constitution''

Revision as of 20:17, 15 April 2005

We are here met for a political object, and discussion involves political terms, many of which may be unfamiliar to those with predominantly technical backgrounds.

For now, here's a quick glossary of political terms. Anyone with the willingness might work to link these to Wiktionary or other good sources.

Glossary

politics 
"the art of the possible"; how humans organize their communities
convention 
assembly of individuals who meet to establish a charter or other foundation issues; tends to be very large
party 
group within a convention who are agreed on a platform and work together to advance it; usually a large fraction of convention members
caucus 
group within a convention who seek to find a common ground on some issues; often quite small
platform 
political agenda or plan of action
plank 
element, section, or clause of a platform
charter 
foundation document which controls all other documents, rules, and procedures governing a community; sometimes constitution