By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define democracy and explain its meaning
  • 2State the key features of a democracy
  • 3Distinguish direct from representative democracy
  • 4Give the arguments for why democracy is considered the best form of government
  • 5Explain the core values of democracy and the challenges it faces
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Why this chapter matters
Democracy is the foundational civics idea of the whole course and of Indian citizenship. This NCF theme reliably gives the RBSE board a features-of-democracy or why-democracy question — easy, high-certainty marks — and underpins the next theme, Elections.

Democracy — RBSE Class 9 (Social Science · NCF)

In a democracy, the person who sweeps the street and the person who owns a factory have exactly one vote each — and together, ordinary people choose who rules them. That simple idea, that power flows from the people, is one of humanity's most powerful. This theme asks what democracy really means, why we value it, and what it demands of us.


1. What is democracy?

Democracy is a form of government in which the rulers are chosen by the people, and power ultimately rests with the people.

The word comes from the Greek demos (people) and kratia (rule) — "rule by the people." Abraham Lincoln's famous phrase captures it: democracy is government "of the people, by the people, for the people."


2. Key features of a democracy

A government is truly democratic only if it has these features:

  1. Elected rulers — the people who take the major decisions are chosen by the people.
  2. Free and fair elections — held regularly, giving people a real choice and a genuine chance to change their rulers.
  3. One person, one vote, one value — every adult has one vote, and every vote counts equally (universal adult franchise).
  4. Rule of law and rights — the government works within limits set by the constitution and respects citizens' fundamental rights; no one is above the law.

Holding elections alone is not enough — all these features must genuinely hold for a country to be a real democracy.


3. Types of democracy

  • Direct democracy — people participate directly in decision-making (as in ancient Greek city-states, or a modern gram sabha where villagers decide together). Practical only for small groups.
  • Representative (indirect) democracy — people elect representatives who make decisions on their behalf. This is what large modern countries like India use, because millions cannot all decide directly.

4. Why democracy? — the case for it

Democracy has shortcomings — decisions can be slow (many must be consulted), and leaders keep changing. Yet it is considered the best form of government because:

  • it is accountable — rulers must answer to the people and can be voted out;
  • it makes better decisions through discussion and consultation;
  • it provides a peaceful, legitimate way to resolve conflicts;
  • it upholds the dignity and equality of every citizen; and, above all,
  • it allows mistakes to be corrected — wrong decisions and bad rulers can be changed, which non-democracies do not permit.

5. The values of democracy

Democracy is not just a way of choosing a government; it rests on values that a society must nurture:

  • Equality — all citizens are equal before the law, regardless of birth, religion, gender or wealth.
  • Freedom — of speech, expression, belief and association.
  • Justice — fair treatment and protection of everyone's rights, including minorities.
  • Participation — citizens taking an active part (voting, debating, holding leaders responsible).
  • Tolerance and respect — accepting differences and dissent.

A good democracy works constantly towards an equal, just and dignified life for all — not just holding elections.


6. Challenges to democracy

Even in a democracy, problems remain: inequality and poverty, discrimination (by caste, religion, gender), corruption, and low participation or awareness. Overcoming these — and deepening democracy so its benefits reach everyone — is an ongoing task in which citizens have a real role.


7. Closing thought

Democracy is the remarkable idea that power belongs to the people — expressed through free, fair elections, equal votes, the rule of law and rights. It is not perfect: it can be slow and messy, and it faces real challenges like inequality and corruption. But it earns its place as the best form of government because it is accountable, treats citizens as equals, and can correct its own mistakes. And it lives not only in institutions but in values — equality, freedom, justice, participation — that citizens must keep alive.

For the RBSE board (new NCF Class 9 SST), master the meaning and features of democracy, direct vs representative democracy, the arguments for democracy, and its core values and challenges. This theme leads directly into the next one — Elections — which shows democracy in action.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Definition
Government in which rulers are chosen by the people
Greek: demos (people) + kratia (rule).
Lincoln's phrase
Of the people, by the people, for the people
Classic description of democracy.
Features
Elected rulers · free & fair elections · one person-one vote-one value · rule of law/rights
All must hold.
Direct vs representative
Direct = people decide themselves; Representative = elected reps decide
India = representative.
Best argument for
Democracy is accountable and can correct its own mistakes
Its decisive advantage.
Values
Equality, freedom, justice, participation, tolerance
Democracy is more than elections.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying any country with elections is a democracy
Elections alone are not enough. A democracy also needs free and fair elections with real choice, equal votes, and rule of law/rights — all the features together.
WATCH OUT
Confusing direct and representative democracy
In direct democracy people decide themselves (small groups, gram sabha). In representative democracy people elect representatives to decide for them (large countries like India).
WATCH OUT
Treating 'arguments against' as proof democracy is bad
Democracy has flaws (slow decisions, changing leaders), but it is still the best form because it is accountable and self-correcting.
WATCH OUT
Reducing democracy only to voting
Democracy also rests on values — equality, freedom, justice, participation, tolerance — and works towards a dignified life for all, not just elections.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting universal adult franchise
A key feature is that EVERY adult has one vote of equal value, regardless of wealth, gender, caste or religion.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Definition
What is the literal meaning of the word 'democracy'?
Show solution
It comes from the Greek words demos (people) and kratia (rule), meaning 'rule by the people'. ✦ Answer: rule by the people (demos + kratia).
Q2EASY· Feature
What does 'universal adult franchise' mean?
Show solution
Every adult citizen has the right to one vote, of equal value, regardless of wealth, gender, caste or religion. ✦ Answer: every adult has one equal vote.
Q3EASY· Types
Which type of democracy does India follow, and why?
Show solution
Representative (indirect) democracy, because millions of people cannot all take decisions directly, so they elect representatives to decide for them. ✦ Answer: representative democracy — people elect representatives.
Q4MEDIUM· Features
State any two features of a democracy.
Show solution
Any two of: rulers are elected by the people; elections are free and fair with a real choice; one person, one vote, one value; the government follows the rule of law and respects citizens' rights. ✦ Answer: any two valid features as above.
Q5MEDIUM· Types
Differentiate between direct and representative democracy.
Show solution
Step 1 — In direct democracy, the people themselves take decisions directly (e.g. ancient Greek city-states, a gram sabha). Step 2 — In representative democracy, people elect representatives who take decisions on their behalf — suitable for large countries. ✦ Answer: direct = people decide themselves; representative = elected reps decide for them.
Q6MEDIUM· Values
Name any four core values on which democracy rests.
Show solution
Any four of: equality, freedom, justice, participation, tolerance and respect for differences. ✦ Answer: any four valid democratic values as above.
Q7HARD· Why democracy
Give three reasons why democracy is considered the best form of government.
Show solution
Step 1 — It is accountable: rulers must answer to the people and can be voted out. Step 2 — It improves decisions through discussion and consultation, and settles conflicts peacefully. Step 3 — It upholds the equality and dignity of citizens and, crucially, allows mistakes to be corrected. ✦ Answer: accountability + better/peaceful decision-making + equality and self-correction (any three).
Q8HARD· Challenges
What are some challenges faced by democracies?
Show solution
Step 1 — Social and economic inequality and poverty limit real participation. Step 2 — Discrimination (by caste, religion, gender) and corruption weaken fairness. Step 3 — Low awareness or participation by citizens can undermine democracy. ✦ Answer: inequality/poverty, discrimination, corruption and low participation are key challenges.
Q9HARD· Evaluate
'Democracy is not perfect, yet it is the best form of government.' Explain.
Show solution
Step 1 — Its flaws: decisions can be slow because many must be consulted, and leaders keep changing, which can seem unstable. Step 2 — Yet it is accountable — rulers answer to the people and can be replaced peacefully. Step 3 — It makes decisions through discussion, resolves conflicts peacefully, and treats citizens as equals with dignity. Step 4 — Above all, it allows wrong decisions to be reviewed and corrected — which non-democracies do not — so, despite its flaws, it is the best available option. ✦ Answer: flawed (slow, changing leaders) but accountable, equal, peaceful and self-correcting — hence the best form.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Democracy = rulers chosen by the people; 'of the people, by the people, for the people'.
  • Features: elected rulers; free and fair elections; one person-one vote-one value; rule of law and rights.
  • Elections alone are not enough — all features must hold.
  • Direct democracy (people decide) vs representative democracy (elected reps decide); India = representative.
  • Why democracy: accountable, better/peaceful decisions, equality/dignity, and — key — it corrects its own mistakes.
  • Values: equality, freedom, justice, participation, tolerance.
  • Democracy is more than elections — it works towards a dignified life for all.
  • Challenges: inequality/poverty, discrimination, corruption, low participation.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4–5 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / very short11–2Meaning, franchise, type of democracy
Short answer2–31–2Features; direct vs representative; values
Long answer40–1Why democracy is best; challenges
Prep strategy
  • Memorise the definition and the four features of democracy
  • Keep direct vs representative democracy clear with examples
  • Learn the arguments for democracy, especially self-correction
  • List the core democratic values and the main challenges

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Indian democracy

India's universal adult franchise and regular free elections put these features into everyday practice.

Judging governments

The features give a checklist to assess whether any government is genuinely democratic.

Active citizenship

Understanding accountability encourages people to vote and hold leaders responsible.

Local self-government

Gram sabhas show direct democracy at the village level in India.

Rights and dissent

Democratic values explain why free speech, a free press and the right to protest matter.

School and community bodies

Democratic values apply to running councils, clubs and panchayats fairly.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Open with the definition, then list the four features.
  2. Distinguish direct vs representative democracy with an example each.
  3. For 'why democracy', end with the self-correction argument.
  4. List core values and challenges as crisp bullet points.
  5. Link answers to Indian examples (adult franchise, gram sabha) for application marks.
  6. Stress that democracy is more than elections when the question allows.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Majoritarianism vs the protection of minority rights within democracy.
  • How a free press, independent judiciary and civil society strengthen democracy.
  • Comparing parliamentary and presidential democratic systems.
  • Measuring the quality of democracy across countries.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

RBSE Class 9 Board/Annual (BSER Ajmer)High — features and why-democracy questions most years
NTSE / state scholarshipMedium — civics MCQs
UPSC / State PCSMedium — polity foundations
CLAT / law entrancesMedium — democratic principles

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

From 2026-27, RBSE Class 9 SST follows the new NCF-SE-2023 integrated book 'Understanding Society: India and Beyond'. 'Democracy' is a political-science theme within it. RBSE (BSER Ajmer) sets the exam pattern and marking.

Some non-democracies also hold elections. A true democracy also needs those elections to be free and fair with a real choice, every adult to have an equal vote, and the government to follow the rule of law and respect citizens' rights. All these features must hold together.

In direct democracy, people take decisions themselves, which is practical only for small groups (like a village gram sabha). In representative democracy, people elect representatives to take decisions for them — the system large countries such as India use.

That it can correct its own mistakes. Because rulers are accountable and can be changed peacefully through elections, wrong decisions and bad governments can be reviewed and replaced — something non-democracies do not allow.

No. Voting is essential, but democracy also rests on values like equality, freedom, justice, participation and tolerance, and it should work towards a just and dignified life for all citizens — not just the act of holding elections.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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