The ancient republics like the
Roman Republic or
Ancient Athens didn't use representation but relied on the meeting of the citizenry ( see
Roman assemblies or
Ekklesia). The Roman model of governance was considered a mixture between (direct) democracy, aristocracy (in the form of senate for life) and monarchy (in the form of the consuls) and would inspire many political thinkers over the centuries (see
mixed government) but the need of convoking people at large made it impractical for large states. Representative democracy is a form of democracy in which people vote for representatives who then vote on policy initiatives; as opposed to direct democracy, a form of democracy in which people vote on policy initiatives directly. A
European
medieval tradition of selecting representatives from the various
estates (
classes, but not as we know them today) to advise/control
monarchs led to relatively wide familiarity with representative systems inspired by Roman systems, with the noble and clerical estates being identified with the senatorial aristocracy, and the third estate being identified with the democratic element. In Britain, representative government grew in the late thirteenth century. The
Oxford Parliament of 1258 stripped the
king of unlimited authority, and
Simon de Montfort's Parliament of 1265 included both noblemen and citizens from each town. Later, in the 17th century, the
Parliament of England implemented some of the ideas and systems of
liberal democracy, culminating in the
Glorious Revolution and passage of the
Bill of Rights 1689. Widening of the voting franchise took place through a series of
Reform Acts in the 19th and 20th centuries. 's index of electoral democracy (another term for representative democracy) peaked in 2012, and has since declined, with the decline accelerating in the early 2020s. The
American Revolution led to the creation of a new
Constitution of the United States in 1787, with a national legislature based partly on direct elections of representatives every two years, and thus responsible to the electorate for continuance in office.
Senators were not directly elected by the people until the adoption of the
Seventeenth Amendment in 1913. Women, men who owned no property, and Black people, and others not originally given voting rights, in most states eventually
gained the vote through changes in state and federal law in the course of the 19th and 20th centuries. Until it was repealed by the
Fourteenth Amendment following the
Civil War, the
Three-Fifths Compromise gave a disproportionate representation of
slave states in the
House of Representatives relative to the voters in free states. The first recorded use of "representative democracy" is on a letter by Alexander Hamilton, where it is used to describe the New York Constitution, distinguishing it from both direct democracy and 'compound governments' . Hamilton would use the term afterwards to describe the
Constitution of the United States during the ratifying convention of New York meaning a government where power is in the people trough representatives directly or indirectly chosen by them. In 1789,
Revolutionary France adopted the
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen and, although short-lived, the
National Convention was elected by all males in 1792.
Universal male suffrage was re-established in France in the wake of the
French Revolution of 1848. Representative democracy came into general favour particularly in post-
industrial revolution nation states where large numbers of
citizens evinced interest in
politics, but where technology and population figures remained unsuited to direct democracy. Many historians credit the
Reform Act 1832 with launching modern representative democracy in the
United Kingdom. , one example of representative democracy Globally, a majority of governments in the world are representative democracies, including constitutional monarchies and republics with strong representative branches. ==Research on representation
per se==