翻訳と辞書
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・ Political positions of Ted Kennedy
・ Political positions of the Democratic Party presidential primary candidates, 2016
・ Political positions of Theodore Roosevelt
・ Political positivism
・ Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun
・ Political power in the United States over time
・ Political prisoner
・ Political Prisoner's Cross 1940–1945
・ Political Prisoner's Medal 1914–1918
・ Political prisoners in Croatia
・ Political prisoners in Imperial Japan
・ Political prisoners in Saudi Arabia
・ Political prisoners in Syria
・ Political prisoners in Yugoslavia
・ Political Prisoners Movement of Tibet
Political privacy
・ Political Process and the Development of the Black Insurgency 1930-1970
・ Political psychological rationalization
・ Political psychology
・ Political Psychology (journal)
・ Political question
・ Political quietism in Islam
・ Political radicalism
・ Political Red Cross
・ Political Register
・ Political rehabilitation
・ Political religion
・ Political repression
・ Political repression in Imperial Japan
・ Political Repression in Modern America


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Political privacy : ウィキペディア英語版
Political privacy

Political privacy has been a concern since voting systems emerged in ancient times. The secret ballot is the simplest and most widespread measure to ensure that political views are not known to anyone other than the voter—it is nearly universal in modern democracy, and considered a basic right of citizenship. Even where other rights of privacy do not exist, this type of privacy very often does.
==Motivation==
Because politics is fundamentally about settling disputes, it puts winners and losers in unique positions to avenge themselves on each other. In a democracy, the winner is physically vulnerable as they often appear in public to explain policies and gain additional support. The loser is also vulnerable as they are subject to the interpretation of criminal justice by winners - law enforcement is often prejudicial, and an independent judiciary is not always available to ensure fairness in how winners of a political conflict deal with losers. Uncertainty about who supported what measure, and the right to keep one's opinion to oneself and not be required to reveal it except voluntarily (such as by joining a political party or answering opinion polls), aren't generally challenged even by the most strident national security advocates. In this sense, supporters and detractors of the state have a common position: when operating within the existing legal bounds of a political system, opinions should be measured only in aggregate.
A jury also typically provides its opinion only as an aggregate and jurors have the right not to reveal whether they found someone 'guilty' in cases where a unanimous verdict is not required. When found 'not guilty', it is also not revealed who opposed or advocated a 'guilty' verdict - particularly important as the accused will now be set free and might be tempted to seek revenge against those who disbelieved him or her.

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