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Misrule

Misrule is a term used to describe governance characterized by incompetence, corruption, oppression, or arbitrary decision-making. It denotes a state in which those who hold political power fail to meet basic standards of legitimacy, accountability, or public welfare.

The word combines mis- (wrong or badly) with rule, and it arises in political discourse as a

In classical political thought, critics warned that rule by the many could degenerate into misrule without

In modern usage, misrule appears in critiques of governments across the spectrum—authoritarian regimes, transitional administrations, and

Because misrule is inherently evaluative, its application depends on context, standards, and perspective. It serves as

descriptive
rather
than
a
formal
doctrine.
In
historical
and
scholarly
writing,
misrule
is
often
contrasted
with
the
rule
of
law,
sound
administration,
and
accountable
government.
stable
institutions
to
check
power.
Later
debates
on
democracy
and
republics
also
used
the
term
to
describe
government
that
abuses
popular
sovereignty,
ignores
minority
rights,
or
acts
through
faction
rather
than
reasoned
policy.
democracies
alike—where
corruption,
cronyism,
incompetence,
or
suppression
of
dissent
undermines
public
governance
and
the
rule
of
law.
Real-world
manifestations
include
misallocation
of
resources,
opaque
decision
processes,
and
policies
that
favor
a
narrow
group
over
the
general
population.
a
heuristic
label
rather
than
a
technical
category,
used
by
historians,
journalists,
and
political
scientists
to
describe
perceived
governance
failures.