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American Dilemmas Section 32

American Dilemmas Section 32. 6 Weeks of Fun. From The Syllabus. Textbooks Class attendance Expectations about Student Work. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives: Part I.

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American Dilemmas Section 32

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  1. American DilemmasSection 32 6 Weeks of Fun

  2. From The Syllabus • Textbooks • Class attendance • Expectations about Student Work

  3. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives: Part I • Through the analysis of material presented and the writing of a critical paper on a current social problem, each student will demonstrate the ability to: • Accurately describe the social, economic, and political dimension of major problems and dilemmas facing contemporary American society;

  4. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives: Part II • Critically analyze social problems by identifying value perspectives and applying concepts of sociology, political science, and economics; • Use knowledge and analyses of social problems to evaluate public policy, and to suggest policy alternatives, with special reference to questions of social justice, the common good, and public and individual responsibility.

  5. Opportunities to Discuss Course Content • Office Hours • 12:00- 2:00 Tuesday and Thursday • And by appointment • Doyle 206 • Email • brianws@stedwards.edu • Phone • 512-428-1294 I am usually around M-F

  6. What American Dilemmas should Not Be • This should not be a course where you are made to feel guilty about who you are. • A course where the instructor preaches about why the United States is the worst nation in recorded history.

  7. What American Dilemmas is • A course that understands that no nation/policy/government is perfect • A course that understands that there are serious social/political/economic problems facing the United States • A course that examines SOCIAL PROBLEMS and their solutions objectively and in the context of reality. This means looking at things analytically and critically. • We do this by using methods from sociology, political science and economics.

  8. What is a Social Problem • It must harm a significant number of people or an influential segment of the population • It must occur frequently • It must be able to be remedied by collective human action (this means Government).

  9. What is Not a Social problem • Something that is produced by natural or biological conditions (hair loss, earthquakes) • Something that is purely a private issue (outside of the direct control of government) • Something that is a pure ethical or moral argument (should cloning be legal?)

  10. What can We do about it? • What is social Policy? • Types of Social Policy • Preventive Measures • Intervention • Broad Social Reform

  11. Should We Solve the Problem? • Can We afford the Direct Costs? • Does it create spillover effects? • Is it Feasible? Policy makers find that doing nothing is often the best solution!

  12. The American Dilemmas Paper The Biggest Challenge

  13. Vetoed Topics • Abortion – court issue • Juvenile Court System- state issue, too many policies • Adolescent Drug Use – high school issue • Lowering the Drinking Age • Affirmative Action- high school issue, not on the agenda • Medical Marijuana/War on Drugs/legalization- too normative • Animal Rights/medical use of animals- not on agenda, already strict laws, ask Ron Mexico • Pornography Capital Punishment/Death Penalty- high school topic, 50 state policies • Same-sex marriage/Civil Unions/same-sex adoption- states have resolved this • Cloning/Stem Cell/Eugenics- ethical issue • School Prayer- Engal v. Vitale, court issue • Euthanasia- ethical issue • Obesity- no two sides, lifestyle choice, no fully developed policies • TV/Media/Internet Regulation- court issue • Gun Regulation – effectively dead for now (as of last week)

  14. What is a good Topic? Can you answer yes to these? • Is it being actively being discussed by legitimate policy-makers? • Does it have a clear unit of analysis? • Is it not primarily an ethical dilemma? • Does it have at least two well-articulated sides? • Is there a legitimate policy solution to your problem Can you write 12-15 pages on it?

  15. Topics That Tend Not To Work • High School Topics • Dilemmas from other nations • Lopsided Topics and Culture War issues • Conspiracy theories (short on evidence) • Issues not subject to government regulation in some way • Sports Issues: i.e. BCS policies

  16. The Paper This is what American Dilemmas is all about • Identify and discuss the history of a social problem (Paper I) • Identify a normative solution to that problem (Paper II) • Identify arguments for and against the solution and discuss whether it is a moral solution (Paper II and III) • Determine whether it is worth doing and how it could be done (Paper III)

  17. Social Problem: Paper 1Controversy: Paper 2 1st research the social problem 2nd research the controversial issue (aka the controversial solution) They are not the same thing --- Different search terms!

  18. Examples: • Social Problem • Immigration • Global Warming • Failing Public Schools • Discrimination based on sexual orientation • Controversial Solution • A Guest Worker Plan • Carbon Tax • Replacing NCLB • Enact tougher federal hate crime laws.

  19. What is a Normative Solution • The Opposite of Empirical • Based on what we think should be • Usually involves the words “should” or “ought to” “Should the Federal Government enact a windfall profits tax on oil companies”

  20. THESIS QUESTION:The controversy • A “normative” or “should” question about a specific solution to your social problem. • Should be narrowand specific (this will develop) Examples: • Should the Texas legislature remove mandatory sentencing requirements? • Should the city of Austin mandate low-cost housing in the downtown area?

  21. Why The Paper? • Practical Reasons • Employers value writing skills • Academic Reasons • It prepares you for Capstone • Personal Reasons • a sense of accomplishment • University Reasons • The mission of the university

  22. The Role of The Constitution in Topic Selection

  23. How the Federal Government does things • The Federal Government rules by enumerated powers • The Federal Government rules by implied powers • “necessary and proper clause,” also establishes Congress’ implied powers—powers that Congress needs to execute its enumerated powers. • This gives the Federal Government tremendous power….if the choose to exercise it

  24. The Supremacy Clause • Article VI- Asserts that when they conflict with state or local laws, the Constitution, national laws and treaties take precedence • Federal law is the supreme law of the land! • The Federal Government also has more Money than the states • Income Tax • Borrow on Full Faith and Credit

  25. The 10th Amendment “Those powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution nor prohibited by it to the States are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”

  26. The Concept of Federalism

  27. Your paper must have a clear Unit of analysis But what is that • The Level of Government that has jurisdiction over the social problem • Not all governments are powerful in all areas • Which means that saying the “government” simply isn’t enough?

  28. So How many governments are there? The Federal Government Ok, That’s one

  29. What Else? 50 State Governments

  30. What Else are there? • 3,034 County Governments • 36,000 Local Governments • 13,000 School Districts • 37,000 Special Districts • Utility Districts- PEC • Hospital Districts • Transit Districts- e.g. CAP Metro • Park Districts • Water Districts- e.g. LCRA • And more!

  31. Who is More Powerful? State Governments Education Law Enforcement Mass Transit Social Services National Government • National Defense • Regulating Commerce • Environmental Policy • Macro-level regulation • Immigration

  32. So who is in Charge? • There are roughly 89,500 governments that have legal authority over policymaking. • Some governments are impotent in certain policy areas, while extremely powerful in others. • When selecting a topic, you must choose it in the context of the proper unit of analysis.

  33. What does all this mean? • Stuff Not in the Constitution, belongs to the states. Stuff the states don’t want to do belongs to us. So… • You do not have a federal right to a guaranteed income, or even an equal income • You do not have a federal right to a public education • At the federal level, marriage is 1 man and 1 woman. • Depending on where you live, you can have as many strip clubs as you want in your neighborhood

  34. But, Depending on the state • You have a right to a free and equal education • You may have the right to a state provided health care system • You may have a right to marry whomever you want • You may have a right to an income higher than the federal minimum wage • You can ban strip clubs

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