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Explore the historical context, structure, and differences between the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution in early American government.
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UNIT 4 STUDY GUIDE Would the Constitution be considered a primary source? James Madison notes from the Constitution Convention?
Plan of union for the original thirteen states or colonies. Was this their form of government?
Do you remember any accomplishments of the Articles of Confederation?
Guidelines of admission of new states into the union (Northwest Territory—Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana), created post offices, could declare war, (Look at your T-Chart)
What is an idea that had a major influence on the authors of the Articles of Confederation?
The authors didn’t won’t to have a strong national government. Why? They felt it would threaten the rights of the people and states. Plus, a government should protect life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. We needed to have a republic.
Compare Articles of Confederation to Constitution to the Constitution.
Example--Created a national government having three branches
Which part of the government was created to respond most directly to the will of the people so that the people’s voice could be heard?
House of Representative---Explain why this would be the answer
Provided a process for admission of the new states to the Union---60,000 population
Why was the Bill of Rights added to the United States Constitution?
Protect individuals freedoms against abuse by the federal (national, central) government-----freedom of speech, religion, press, right to bear arms, search and seizure, right to speedy fair
Federalist wanted a strong Federal Government and a weak state government. Anti-Federalists wanted a strong state government and weak national government. THEY WOULD MOST STRONGLY DISAGREE ON HOW TO DIVIDE POWER BETWEEN THE DIFFERENT LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT.
What was the primary reason the writers (framers)of the United States Constitution created a federal form of government?
To divide the power between the different levels of government---Executive, Judicial, Legislative