Abstract

The article examines some political and socio-economic asumptions for the establishment of modern democracy in its classical version and its defining elements. Particular attention is paid to the analysis of topics on the expansion of the democratic experience in several European states and on the American continent (England, France and the USA) from the XVII-XVIII centuries, during which the birth of modern liberal democracy takes place. It is concluded that modern democracy is based on three historical (political) models from the XVII-XIX centuries (English, French and American), closely related to the form of government (monarchy, republic), state structure (centralized or federal), political regime of government (democratic and undemocratic) or various historical and geopolitical conjunctures.

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