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Chapter 1 Review. AP Government. Government. Institutions and processes that rulers establish to strengthen and perpetuate their power or control over a land and its inhabitants. Simple – tribal council Complex – establishments with elaborate procedures, laws, and bureaucracies
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Chapter 1 Review AP Government
Government • Institutions and processes that rulers establish to strengthen and perpetuate their power or control over a land and its inhabitants. • Simple – tribal council • Complex – establishments with elaborate procedures, laws, and bureaucracies • Complex Government referred to as state • Abstract concept referring to the source of all public authority
How Governments Are Different? • Who Governs? • Autocracy – one • Oligarchy – small group of landowners, military officers, or wealthy merchants • Democracy – Majority of population have influence over decision-making • How much government control is permitted? • Constitutional – (Liberal) Restricted by substantive limits • Authoritarian – No formal limits but government is restrained by the power of other social institutions. • Totalitarian – No formal limits to power and government seeks to absorb or eliminate other social institutions that challenge it.
Means of Coercion • Conscription • Draft • Compelled to serve on juries • Appear before legal tribunals • File official reports including tax returns • Attend school or force children to school
Substantive Limits • When governments are severely limited in terms of what they are permitted to control • Procedural Limits • Limited in how they go about exercising the control of society
Thomas Hobbes - 1588-1679 • Wrote “Leviathan” - how human beings can live together in peace and avoid the danger and fear of civil conflict. • Primary purpose of government is to maintain order • Only through control of people and territory • Absence of government – anarchy • Absence of rule • Anarchy is worse state than tyranny • Life outside of “the state” is often “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short”
John Locke 1632 - 1704 • Ownership of property is important. • Property can be defined as all the laws against trespass that permit us to call something our own • Laws to make our claims stick. • Natural right to defend his “life, health, liberty, or possessions.” • Social contract – Reason and tolerance • Separation of Powers (Montesquieu)
Instrumental • Not knee-jerk reaction. • Individuals think through the benefits and the costs of a decision, speculate about future effects, and weigh the risks of their decision. • When politicians vote in a particular way in order to win reelection.
Politics • Efforts to gain power, to influence those in power, to bring new people to power, or to “throw the old rascals out” are forms of politics.
Five Principles of Politics • All political behavior has a purpose. • All politics is collective action. • Institutions routinely solve collective-action problems. • Political outcomes are the products of individual preferences and institutional procedures. • History matters.
Rationality Principle • All political behavior has a purpose in an expression. • Acts require effort, time, financial resources, and courage. • Simple – reading a headline, talking politics • Modest – watching a political debate, signing a petition, attending city-council meeting • Premeditation – Going to polls, writing a legislator, contributing time and money to campaign
Wholesale Politics • Retail Politics – Dealing directly with constituents • Wholesale Politics – Dealing with a collection of constituents
Collective Action • Building, combining, mixing, the goals of individuals into one to achieve that goal. • Hard to achieve – individuals involved in the decision-making process often have somewhat different goals and preferences.
Informal Bargaining • Informal – No organizational effort to do something. • Relations among neighbors- give and take • Formal – interactions that are governed by rules.
Benefits • Selective – Do not go to everyone but are distributed selectively • Only to those who contribute to the group enterprise • “Pay your dues” to join the organization
By-Product Theory • Groups provide members with private benefits to attract membership. • The possibility of group collective action emerges as a consequence. • “Free riding” – Most individual in large groups don’t make a difference in the final result. • Easy to abstain from participation.
Institutionalized • Routine responses to regularly recurring problems. • Standard ways of dealing with things. • Institutions • Routinized, structured relations • Rules and procedures that provide incentives for political behavior, thereby shaping politics. • Discourage conflict • Enable bargaining • Facilitate decision-making, cooperation, collective action.
“Tragedy of the Commons” • A common is owned by everyone • No incentive to restrict use of “free” resource • As a metaphor • “tragedy of the commons” suggests that individual purposes may clash with the collective welfare. • A common asset is depleted • Water
Jurisdiction • Designation of someone who has the authority to apply the rules or make the decisions • Standing Committees in Congress • Carefully defined by law. • Congressmen become specialists on subject of committee • Bill Bradley • Congressmen get to set agenda of larger chamber.
Gatekeeping • Decisiveness – Rules for making decision. • Agenda Power – What is considered in the first place • Gatekeeping – those who engage in agenda power • Block proposals • Veto Power – Ability to defeat something even if it does become part of agenda.
Transaction Costs • The cost of clarifying each aspect of a principal-agent relationship and monitoring it to make sure arrangements are complied with.
Products of Individual Preferences and Institutional Procedures • Personal Interests • Friends, business interests • Electoral Ambitions • Reelection, higher office • Institutional Ambitions • Appointment to better positions in organization.
Pork Barrel Legislation • Spreading benefits to all members of the legislature so they will vote for a piece of legislation.
Widely Distribute Benefits • Decentralized political system and political ambition • Policies can be sloppy and slapdash due to need to satisfy so many people. • Citizens desire neatness – can’t get that from Congress.
Path Dependency • Explain a current situation based on the historical path we have taken • Events in the past or choices made earlier in history. • In Politics • Rules and procedures • Loyalties and alliances • Jews and the Democratic Party • Historically conditioned points of view • Iraq viewed through Vietnam experience