The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics (194 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics
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pancasila
The official ideology of the Indonesian state. The word means ‘five principles’, which are democracy, humanitarianism, justice, monotheism, and unity.
Pankhurst family
Emmeline Pankhurst (1858–1928) and her daughters Christabel (1880–1958) and Sylvia (1882–1960). The mother and daughters were leaders of the English suffragette movement. In 1903 they formed the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), and adopted the slogan ‘Votes for Women’. They adopted tactics of disruption, arson, and window breaking to argue for their rights.
STh 
pantouflage
The practice of moving quickly on retirement from a public-sector position into a (usually lucrative) private-sector one, from the French
pantoufles
, slippers. The practice is common (and controversial) in Britain, the word less so.
paradox of voting
(1) The majority-rule
cycle
whereby, given at least three voters and at least three options, there may be a majority for x over y, for y over z, and for z over x simultaneously. In the minimal case where this may arise, one voter has x>y>z, a second has y>z>x, and a third has z>x>y, where > means ‘I prefer the former to the latter’. It has been argued that this is not paradoxical, merely surprising. The term
cycle
(sometimes Condorcet cycle after its discoverer) is preferred.
(2) In his highly influential
An Economic Theory of Democracy
(1957), Anthony Downs popularized the idea of treating political actors like economic ones, and analysing their actions with economists' tools. Thus the rational voter would vote for his or her favourite party if and only if the value to that voter of a government led by the party he or she favoured, multiplied by the probability that his or hers was the vote that brought this about, exceeded the cost of voting. However, the probability of being decisive in this sense is infinitesimally small in a normal election: so why does anybody vote? This has alternatively been labelled the ‘paradox of rational abstention’ on the argument that it seems to be rational to abstain but surprisingly few people do so.
pardon (Presidential)
The power of the US President to pardon individuals. The President may issue proclamations that have the force of law, freeing individuals from the legal consequences of any crime except impeachment. In 1974 President Gerald Ford pardoned Richard Nixon , preventing any prosecutions for crimes that may have been committed by Nixon during his Presidency.

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