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Introduction to Government. What is a State?. Central Message:. What is a government ?. Central Message:. Three types of power. Central Message:. Population. Characteristics of a State. Territory. Government. Sovereignty. Central Message:. Origins of the State.
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Central Message: What is a government?
Central Message: Three types of power
Central Message: Population Characteristics of a State Territory Government Sovereignty
Central Message: Origins of the State
Origins of the State The Force Theory The Force Theory • The force theory states that one person or a small group took control of an area and forced all within it to submit to that person’s or group’s rule. The Evolutionary Theory • The evolutionary theory argues that the state evolved naturally out of the early family. The Divine Right Theory • The theory of divine right holds that God created the state and that God gives those of royal birth a “divine right” to rule. The Social Contract Theory • The social contract theory argues that the state arose out of a voluntary act of free people.
Central Message: Purpose of Government Preamble to the Constitution
Government 5 Functions of a National Government • Maintain a National Defense • Govt. protects its national sovereignty, usually by maintaining armed services • Nuclear age has sophisticated weapons • U.S. spends over $300 billion/year on defense
Government 2. Provide public services • Aka public goods (goods that everyone shares) • Schools, libraries, highways, public parks, clean air and water • Provided for those not able to access privately owned services (i.e. private schools)
Government 3. Preserve Order • Govt. may resort to extreme measures to restore order when people protest in large numbers • 1970: Kent State • 1992: LA Riots
4. Socialize the Young Most modern govts. pay for education and use it to instill values among the young 5. Collect Taxes Used to pay for the public goods and services Approx. 1 out of every 3 dollars earned by American citizen is used to pay for national, state, and local taxes Government
Government • Govt. functions = weighty decisions by political leaders • How much should we spend on national defense as opposed to education? • How high should taxes for Medicare and SS be? • The way we answer those questions is through politics
Unitary Government A unitary government has all powers held by a single, central agency. Confederate Government A confederationis an alliance of independent states. Federal Government A federal government is one in which the powers of government are divided between a central government and several local governments. An authority superior to both the central and local governments makes this division of power on a geographic basis. Classification by Geographic Distribution of Power
Government Government Types 1. Autocracy • Absolute Monarchy, Constitutional Monarchy, Dictatorship • Unitary System • Queen, King, Dictator, King or Queen w/leg.body • AM: Saudi Arabia, Qutar, Bhutan, Swaziland • CM: England, Netherlands, Denmark, Nepal, Sweden • Dict: Cuba, North Korea
Constitutional Monarch: Shares govt. powers with elected legislatures or serve as ceremonial leaders Queen Elizabeth II (Great Britain) Absolute Monarch: Has complete and unlimited power to rule King Fahd (Saudi Arabia) Government
Government Dictators • Govt. not responsible to the people and people lack the power to limit their rulers Fidel Castro (Cuba) Kim Jong (N.Korea)
Government Government Types • Oligarchy • Unitary • Small group rules • Membership based on wealth, lineage, military power, religion • China
Government Government Types 3. Democracy • Federal • Direct Democracy – people rule directly • Citizens come together to discuss and pass laws, and select rulers (most turn to mob rule) • Indirect Democracy (Representative) – people rule through elected representatives • Aka republic • DD: Switzerland has mixture of DD and ID • ID: U.S., Canada, Australia, Italy
What is the difference between Presidential and Parliamentary Governments?
Democracy • Word comes from two Greek words – Demos (people) and Kratos (authority of the people) • Supreme political authority rests with the people • Government is only conducted w/ people’s consent
Democracy Basic Concepts of Democracy (What is necessary for the establishment and maintenance of a Democracy?) • Individual Liberty (Effective Participation) • Citizens must be as free as possible to develop and express their preferences through the decision-making process
2. Majority Rule with Minority Rights Govt. decisions must be based on the will of the majority (over half the voters) Will of minority always heard and protected Interest groups protect minority rights and promote minority opinion 3. Free Elections People have chance to choose their leaders and voice opinions on issues Every vote carries same weight Citizens free to support issue or help candidates get elected Racial, ethnic, religious tests cannot restrict voting Citizens vote by secret ballot w/out fear of punishment for their vote Democracy
4. Competing Political Parties Voters must have access to competing ideas Democrats and Republicans (2 major U.S. parties) 5. Education Voting makes little sense unless a large number of voters can read and write to express their interests and opinions Democracy
Democracy 6. Equal Distribution of Wealth • Relatively prosperous nation with equitable distribution of wealth • Extreme amount of wealth or poverty lessens possibility of healthy democracy
Democracy 7. Inclusion • Citizenship open to all if Democratic
The American concept of democracy rests on these basic notions: (1) A recognition of the fundamental worth and dignity of every person; (2) A respect for the equality of all persons; (3) A faith in majority rule and an insistence upon minority rights; (4) An acceptance of the necessity of compromise; and (5) An insistence upon the widest possible degree of individual freedom.
Democracy and the Free Enterprise System • Free enterprise system is an economic system characterized by private or corporate ownership of capital goods; investments that are determined by private decision rather than by state control; and determined in a free market. • Decisions in a free enterprise system are determined by the law of supply and demand. • An economy in which private enterprise exists in combination with a considerable amount of government regulation and promotion is called a mixed economy.