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AP Comparative Government & Politics Cheat Sheet 2026

AP Comparative Government Must memorize — no sheet provided Updated July 2026

The 6 Required Countries — Quick Comparison

CountryRegime TypeGovernment StructureHead of StateKey Feature
United KingdomLiberal democracyUnitary, parliamentary, constitutional monarchyMonarch (ceremonial); PM (executive)Westminster model; fusion of powers; FPTP elections; no written constitution
RussiaHybrid/illiberal ("managed democracy")Federal (nominally), semi-presidentialPresident (dominant); Prime MinisterDominant party system (United Russia); superpresidentialism; kleptocracy; state-controlled media
ChinaAuthoritarian (single-party)Unitary, presidential-ish, CCP dominancePresident/General Secretary (same person)CCP controls all; NPC rubber-stamps; guanxi (relationships); civil society suppressed
IranTheocratic republic ("Islamic Republic")Unitary, mixed clerical-republicanSupreme Leader (top); President (executive)Guardian Council vets candidates; Supreme Leader controls military, judiciary; dual sovereignty
MexicoLiberal democracy (transitional)Federal, presidentialPresident (combined head of state + government)PRI one-party dominance ended 2000; currently MORENA; federalism + strong presidency
NigeriaFederal republic (democracy with challenges)Federal, presidential, multi-ethnicPresidentEthnically divided (Hausa-Fulani, Yoruba, Igbo); oil-dependent; North/South tensions; corruption

United Kingdom

Key Institutions

  • Parliament: House of Commons (elected, 650 seats) + House of Lords (unelected — life peers, bishops)
  • Prime Minister: Leader of majority party; accountable to Commons (vote of no confidence)
  • Monarch: Head of state, ceremonial; "reigns but does not rule"
  • Supreme Court: Separated from Parliament in 2009; judicial review of statute

Key Concepts

  • Parliamentary sovereignty — Parliament can legislate on anything
  • FPTP (First Past the Post) electoral system — winner-take-all, single-member districts
  • Devolution — power transferred to Scotland, Wales, N. Ireland
  • No codified constitution — based on statutes, conventions, common law
  • Question Time — PM answers questions weekly in Commons

Russia

Key Institutions

  • President: Dominant executive — appoints PM, controls military/security
  • State Duma: Lower house of parliament; controlled by United Russia party
  • Federation Council: Upper house; represents federal subjects
  • Constitutional Court: Limited independence; rubber-stamp in practice
  • Security services (FSB): Major informal power center

Key Concepts

  • Superpresidentialism — formal and informal power concentrated in president
  • "Managed democracy" — elections occur but outcomes controlled
  • Siloviki — security/military elite with political power
  • Oligarchs — business elites who benefited from 1990s privatization
  • Mixed electoral system (proportional + single-member districts)
  • State corporatism — state controls key sectors

China

Key Institutions

  • CCP (Chinese Communist Party): Only party; overlaps with all state institutions
  • National People's Congress: Formal legislature; ~3,000 members; meets annually; rubber-stamp body
  • State Council: Cabinet-like executive body, led by Premier
  • Politburo Standing Committee: 7-member inner circle — actual power center
  • PLA (People's Liberation Army): Reports to CCP, not state

Key Concepts

  • Democratic centralism — decisions made centrally, implementation downward
  • Cadre system — career officials evaluated on performance metrics
  • Special Economic Zones — market economy areas within socialist state
  • One-child policy (ended 2015) → now 3-child
  • Internet censorship ("Great Firewall") — political control of information
  • Nomenklatura — list of approved candidates for government positions

Iran

Key Institutions

  • Supreme Leader: Highest authority — controls military, judiciary, foreign policy
  • President: Elected; runs day-to-day government; subordinate to Supreme Leader
  • Majles (Parliament): 290 elected members; can pass laws (if Guardian Council approves)
  • Guardian Council: 12 clerics/jurists; vets legislation AND candidates for office
  • Expediency Council: Resolves disputes between Majles and Guardian Council
  • Assembly of Experts: 88 clerics; elects and can remove Supreme Leader

Key Concepts

  • Velayat-e Faqih — guardianship of the Islamic jurist; Supreme Leader's authority from Islam
  • Reformists vs. Conservatives — factional divisions within the clerical establishment
  • Dual sovereignty — clerical institutions vs. elected institutions
  • Bonyads — clerical-controlled foundations; parallel economy
  • Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) — military + economic power base

Mexico

Key Institutions

  • President: Single 6-year term (sexenio); no re-election; combined head of state + government
  • Congress: Senate (128 seats) + Chamber of Deputies (500 seats); bicameral
  • Supreme Court (SCJN): Growing independence since 2000
  • MORENA: Currently dominant party (successor to PRI dominance era)

Key Concepts

  • PRI (1929–2000) — near-total one-party dominance for 71 years
  • Sexenio — 6-year presidential term; power rotates via party selection
  • Corporatism — PRI organized labor, peasants, military into state structure
  • Democratization — free elections since 2000; PAN won presidency (Vicente Fox)
  • Federal system — 31 states + CDMX; growing role of state governments
  • Drug cartel violence — major governance challenge; questions over state legitimacy
  • Maquiladoras — export-processing zones near US border

Nigeria

Key Institutions

  • President: Directly elected; both head of state and government; 4-year terms (max 2)
  • National Assembly: Senate (109) + House of Representatives (360)
  • Federal character principle: All ethnic/regional groups represented in government
  • INEC: Independent National Electoral Commission

Key Concepts

  • Three major ethnic groups: Hausa-Fulani (north, Muslim), Yoruba (southwest), Igbo (southeast)
  • North-South divide: Muslim north vs. Christian south; political power-sharing norm
  • Oil dependency — ~90% of export earnings; "resource curse"
  • OPEC member; Niger Delta oil production and conflict
  • Military coups (1966, 1983, 1993, 1999 return to democracy)
  • Corruption — major challenge; Transparency International rankings
  • Boko Haram — Islamist insurgency in northeastern Nigeria

Key Comparative Concepts & Definitions

ConceptDefinitionExample Countries
Liberal democracyFree elections + rule of law + civil liberties + civil societyUK, Mexico (post-2000)
AuthoritarianCentralized power; limited political freedom; no meaningful electionsChina, (Iran partially)
TheocracyReligious authority as basis of government legitimacyIran
Parliamentary systemExecutive emerges from legislature; PM accountable to parliamentUK
Presidential systemSeparate election of executive; fixed terms; checks between branchesMexico, Nigeria, Russia (nominally)
Semi-presidentialElected president + PM responsible to legislatureRussia, France
Unitary stateCentral government holds sovereignty; regions get delegated authorityUK, China, Iran
Federal stateConstitutional division of power between national and regional governmentsRussia, Mexico, Nigeria
LegitimacyBelief that a government's authority is rightful; sources: traditional, charismatic, rational-legalAll 6
Civil societyOrganizations independent of state (NGOs, unions, churches)Strong in UK; suppressed in China/Iran
CorporatismState organizes interest groups into officially sanctioned bodiesMexico (PRI era), China
Rentier stateState earns large revenue from natural resources; less dependent on taxationNigeria, Iran (oil)
DemocratizationTransition from authoritarian to democratic ruleMexico (1990s–2000); Russia (failed)
Coup d'étatSudden, unlawful seizure of state power, usually by militaryNigeria (multiple); Russia (1991 attempt)

AP Comp Gov FRQ Strategy

FRQ Types

  • Conceptual analysis: Define a concept and apply it to 1–2 countries
  • Comparative: Compare two countries on a specific dimension (elections, civil liberties, federal structure)
  • Country-specific: Explain a political process, institution, or trend in one country
  • Argument: Support a claim about political systems using evidence from course countries

Strong FRQ Formula

  • Define the concept using precise political science language
  • Apply to the specified country with specific, accurate evidence
  • Explain the significance or causal relationship
  • Compare if asked — always use "In contrast" or "Unlike X, Y..."
Key phrase for comparisons: "Unlike the UK's parliamentary system where the executive is fused with the legislature, China's National People's Congress formally separates these institutions but in practice the CCP controls both."

Electoral Systems Comparison

CountrySystemConsequence
UKFPTP (single-member plurality)Two-party dominance; winner-takes-all; small parties disadvantaged
RussiaMixed: proportional + single-member districtsUnited Russia dominates; manipulation possible
ChinaNPC "elections" at local level only; CCP selects candidatesNo real electoral competition
IranPresidential + parliamentary; Guardian Council vets candidatesAppearance of elections; reformists often blocked
MexicoPresidential: plurality for president; mixed for congressThree-party competition (PRI, PAN, MORENA)
NigeriaPlurality; ethnically/regionally structured partiesEthnic voting patterns; two main parties (APC, PDP)
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