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11 ideologies in the knowledge graph.
Political Spectrum
Political position that seeks moderate solutions, rejecting extremes of left and right.
Political ideology combining Christian ethics with democratic governance. Typically centre-right, pro-welfare, pro-European.
Political tradition that values continuity, inherited institutions, social order, and gradual change over sweeping redesign. Conservative movements differ across countries, but they commonly defend tradition, authority, private property, and skepticism toward utopian politics.
Far-right authoritarian ultranationalism characterized by dictatorial power, forcible suppression of opposition, and strong regimentation of society and the economy. Associated with Mussolini's Italy and Nazi Germany.
Political ideology emphasizing environmentalism, social justice, nonviolence, and grassroots democracy.
Broad political tradition centered on individual rights, constitutional government, civil liberties, and equal citizenship. Liberal schools disagree about markets and welfare, but most share a commitment to rule of law, pluralism, and limits on arbitrary power.
Political philosophy advocating minimal government, individual liberty, and free markets. Skeptical of state authority.
Ideology that places the nation at the center of political loyalty and argues that political power should protect national identity, sovereignty, and self-determination. It can be civic or ethnic, emancipatory or exclusionary, depending on how the nation is defined.
Political style or ideology that pits a supposedly authentic people against a corrupt elite and demands that politics reflect the popular will more directly. It can attach itself to left-wing, right-wing, democratic, or authoritarian projects.
Center-left ideology that accepts electoral democracy and a market economy but insists that the state must reduce inequality, protect workers, and provide strong social insurance. It usually aims to reform capitalism rather than abolish it.
Family of left-wing ideologies that seeks collective, public, or democratic control over major economic resources and production. Socialists argue that markets alone produce avoidable inequality and that economic power should be more accountable to society.