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Answer:

The Rule of Law is a term that is often used but difficult to define. A frequently heard saying is that  the rule of law means the government of law, not men. But what is meant by “a government of  law, not men”? Aren’t laws made by men and women in their roles as legislators? Don’t men and  women enforce the law as police officers or interpret the law as judges? And don’t all of us choose  to follow, or not to follow, the law as we go about our daily lives? How does the rule of law exist  independently from the people who make it, interpret it, and live it? The easiest answer to these  questions are that the Rule of Law cannot ever be entirely separate from the people who make up  our government and our society. The rule of law is more of an idea that we strive to achieve, but  sometimes fail to live up to. The idea of the rule of law has been around for a long time. Many  societies, including our own, have developed institutions and procedures to try to make the rule of  law a reality. These institutions and procedures have contributed to the definition of what makes  up the Rule of Law and what is necessary to achieve it.