Civil society of the Great Steppe: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "The '''civil society''' of the various native states of the Great Steppe is comparable to the Euclean concept of the {{wp|civil service}}, but instead of describing a grou...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''civil society''' of the various native states of the [[Great Steppe]] is comparable to the Euclean concept of the {{wp|civil service}}, but instead of describing a group of individuals who are employed by the state, refers to the responsibilities of the state as they are divided into the existing divisions of society. In the case of the Great Steppe specifically, this refers to [[Peoples of the Great Steppe|tribes]] and social classes. In the modern era, civil society has been largely displaced by militarism, principalism, and [[Southern Democracy]].
The '''civil society''' of the various native states of the [[Great Steppe]] is comparable to the Euclean concept of the {{wp|civil service}}, but instead of describing a group of individuals who are employed by the state, refers to the responsibilities of the state as they are divided into the existing divisions of society. In the case of the Great Steppe specifically, this refers to [[Peoples of the Great Steppe|tribes]] and social classes. In the modern era, civil society has been largely displaced by militarism, principalism, and [[Southern democracy]].


{{Great Steppe Topics}}
{{Great Steppe Topics}}
[[Category:Politics_(Kylaris)]]
[[Category:Politics_(Kylaris)]]
[[Category:Coius]]
[[Category:Coius]]

Revision as of 22:00, 2 March 2020

The civil society of the various native states of the Great Steppe is comparable to the Euclean concept of the civil service, but instead of describing a group of individuals who are employed by the state, refers to the responsibilities of the state as they are divided into the existing divisions of society. In the case of the Great Steppe specifically, this refers to tribes and social classes. In the modern era, civil society has been largely displaced by militarism, principalism, and Southern democracy.

Template:Great Steppe Topics