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Encyclopedia > Liberals

In politics, the term liberal refers to:

  • an adherent of the ideology of liberalism or a state or quality of this ideology. (Note: the words "liberal" or "liberalism" can have different meanings in different countries and may also vary with the political background of the user. Therefore, the terms have various meanings throughout Wikipedia. A more comprehensive discussion can be found at Liberalism.)
  • a political party associated with ideals of individual freedom, greater intellectual liberty, greater individual participation in government, and constitutional, political, and administrative reforms designed to secure these objectives, such as the U.S. Constitution.
  • if capitalized (as in "Liberal" with a capital-L), the word usually refers to members of a political party that goes by the name "Liberal Party" (Note: a party calling itself "Liberal" may not necessarely follow Liberalism.)
  • a supporter or member of a liberal party (see also small-l liberal).

As a non-political adjective, liberal can refer to:

"Liberal" is also the name of two towns in the United States: Liberal, Kansas and Liberal, Missouri.


El Liberal was the name of a daily newspaper published in Spain between 1879 and 1936.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Liberalism (240 words)
Liberal International (LI) is the world federation of liberal and progressive democratic political parties.
LI was founded in 1947 to strengthen liberal protection from totalitarianism, facism and communism.
Liberal Conference on Human Rights, 8-9 December 2007 The protection of liberty and civil societyhas beenconstantly on the top agenda o...
20th WCP: Liberalism, Civic Reformism and Democracy (2559 words)
Liberalism assumes political representation to be a necessary mediation for the institutional complexity of modern societies, though it does not mean to abandon the assumption of participation as the full accomplishment of the civil condition.
Liberal pluralism is an inclusive pluralism whose ideal is but a community of communities: the old medieval idea of a universal community, but, rather, the Kantian idea of a world confederation of states or the pragmatist idea of a universal community of communication.
Liberalism is a public philosophy committed to the accomplishment, the improvement and, hence, the reform of the civil condition.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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