Gallery: The Design of Parliaments Has a Funkadelic Impact on Politics
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XML identified just five typologies for parliament buildings. The "opposing benches" layout is most useful for heated debate between two distinct parties.
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The majority of the world's parliament assembly halls follow the "semicircle" layout. Like a good concert hall, a semicircle parliament room affords more people a decent view, creating a stronger sense of egalitarianism among its members. Democracies often meet and operate in this layout.
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The "horseshoe" layout is something of a hybrid of the "opposing benches" and "semicircle" typologies. There are two phsyical arrangements here: tête-à-tête confrontation and side-by-side alignment. Former British colonies like Australia, South Africa and Bangladesh meet in horseshoe rooms.
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The "circle" typology is the newest of the five. XML's research found that it's based on the 10th century room used for Iceland's parliament, but only reemerged as a modern space in the 1980s. Only 11 parliaments around the world use this typology, but it's thought to be the most democratic of them all, because it totally eschews a front and central dominant figure.
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Favored by non-democratic, authoritarian, Communist regimes, the "classroom" layouts transfers a ton of power to the person at the front. Imagine the way ideas might flow between a single professor and an entire class—the group might contribute, but one person is the leader.
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