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Class Starter. Look at your Unit I Plan Using a highlighter, identify the target(s) or “I can” statements that we cover. “I can” statements will be your test!. “The State” What are the four characteristics of a state?. Nations, countries, and states all refer to the same thing!
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Class Starter • Look at your Unit I Plan • Using a highlighter, identify the target(s) or “I can” statements that we cover. • “I can” statements will be your test!
“The State”What are the four characteristics of a state? • Nations, countries, and states all refer to the same thing! • In order to be a “state”, you must have four things: • Territory • Population • Sovereignty (ability to make own laws) • Government
What are the four theories of the Origin of the State? • Major Political Ideas (Origin of the State) • Force Theory: 1 person/group forces power and submission of other people
Evolutionary Theory: State developed naturally out of the “Family.” • Head of Family Head of Government
Divine Right Theory: Ordained by God • God gave them the right to rule
Social Contract Theory: State exists to serve the will of the people • People are the source of power – free to give or withhold power
Traditional Forms of Government • Feudalism: People are bound to a King (loyal) and in return King provides protection
Absolute Monarchy: King/Queen has total control of military and government
Authoritarianism: unlimited amount of power, no restraints on power of government
Liberal Democracy:Protects individual rights; consent of the governed
Democracy • Of the people, for the people (People are source of power) • Equal rights (protection of rights) • Representative government
Dictatorship • Not responsible for policies • Autocracy/Oligarchy • Authoritarian – absolute power • One leader (Despot) • Governs without consent of the people
Unitary • Centralized government (one unit) • Limited local government • One legislature (created by constitution)
Federal • Division of powers • Central & Local Governments (National, State, and Local Government) • Each have own set of powers • Separation of Powers (3 branches)
Confederate • Limited powers – only handles matters that member states assign to it • Central organization – alliance of individual states • No power to make laws that apply to individual states • Come together for a common cause
Presidential • Two branches are equal and separate • Executive Branch led by President • Executive & Legislative branches are popularly elected
Parliamentary • Executive and Legislative branch are combined • Executive must answer to Parliament (Legislature) • Executive (Prime Minister) is elected by Parliament (Legislature)
Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, Wonder Woman, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, James Madison
English Colonists brought ordered, limited, and representative government • Ordered: Justice of the Peace, Sheriff, Counties, etc. • Limited: Restricted power and individual rights • Representative: Government serves the will of the people
Influential Documents • Magna Carta (1215):granted Englishmen certain rights (trial by jury, protection of property, etc.) • Power of the monarchy was not absolute • The Petition of Right (1628):limited kings power • The English Bill of Rights (1689): written to prevent abuses by the King/Queen (right to a fair trial, no excessive bail, no cruel and unusual punishment)
John Locke • Natural Rights: rights inherent in human beings (life, liberty & property) • Consent of the Governed: government gets its authority from the people • Limited Government: restrictions should be placed on the government to protect the natural rights of the people
Comparisons – Natural Rights Thomas Jefferson – Declaration of Independence John Locke “The state of nature has a law to govern it” “Life, Liberty and property” “Laws of Nature and Nature’s God” “Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness”
Need for a Stronger Government • Philadelphia Convention, May, 1787 • Delegates agreed to create a new government • 55/74 delegates attended, 12/13 States attended • Framers (all had distinguished backgrounds and most had education) • Independence Hall – Sworn to Secrecy – Extremely HOT!
Virginia Plan • 3 Branches (Legislative, Executive, & Judicial) • Legislative: Bicameral, decided by population & monetary contributions, House – popular election, Senate – House elected
New Jersey Plan • 3 Branches (Legislative, Executive, & Judicial) • Legislative: Unicameral, Each state has equal representation
How should the States be represented in Congress? • Connecticut Compromise • Bicameral Legislature: House – Population, Senate – equal representation • Sources of the Constitution • British tradition, State Governments, and John Locke’s Two Treatises of Government
Date Finished: September 17, 1787 • Federalists vs. • Favored ratification • Madison & Hamilton • Federalist Papers Anti-Federalists • Opposed ratification • Jefferson • Believed National Government was too powerful • Wanted Bill of Rights
September 13, 1788: 11/13 States ratified the Constitution • New York City – Capital, Congress located on Wall Street • April 30, 1789: George Washington took the oath of office