Pakatan Rakyat Essays

  • Dominant Party System in Malaysia

    656 Words  | 2 Pages

    In a dominant- party system, a single party wins approximately 60 percent or more of the seats in legislature and two or more other parties usually win less than 40 percent of the seat. Opposition parties in dominant-party system are free to contest elections. The dominant parties have to compete for votes to maintain its power or to gain power. This democratic competition imposes a check and balance on the government of the day, promotes transparency and accountability and ensures that service delivery

  • UiTM vs. UKM Bachelor of Science Information System Management

    926 Words  | 2 Pages

    1.0 PURPOSE 1.1 Background UiTM ISM program, Bachelor of Science Information System Management (Hons), equip graduates with knowledge and skills to take on the challenging demands of managing information in various forms and in various types of organizations. The graduates become the main driving force for the development of a knowledge-based society, transforming Malaysia into a developed nation, ensuring that the country’s rich reservoirs of knowledge are systematically organized, maintained and

  • Advantages And Disadvantages Of List System

    1427 Words  | 3 Pages

    0 What is List System? Voting system is the key or wheel to make the democracy properly functioning (Phillips, 2012). Since the democracy has been created, the voting system is shrouded by controversy in the case of translating votes into seats. The list system has been used in Western countries especially Belgium that succesfully adopted the system in 1899. List system related to the idea of parties presenting lists of candidates within each multimember constituency (Gallagher & Mitchell, 2005,

  • Discrimination Against the LGBT Community in Malaysia

    1759 Words  | 4 Pages

    In Malaysia , discrimination against members of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) community reached new levels of intensity ; sodomy remained a crime. In fact, the Government maintained its refusal to consider repeal of article 377A-B of the penal code, which criminalises “carnal intercourse against the order of nature”and punishes it with the penalty of imprisonment for a term extendable to twenty years. Throughout 2013 a government-backed musical aiming to warn young people about