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Learn the principles of government, characteristics of a state, origins of the state, the purpose of government, forms of government, and basic concepts of democracy, including individual worth, equality, majority rule, minority rights, compromise, and freedom.
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Principles of Government Magruder Chapter One
Government and the State Section One
What is Government? • Government makes and enforces public policies. • Government consists of lawmakers, administrators, and judges.
Four Characteristics of a State • Population • A state consists of people • Largest country – China – 1.3 billion • Smallest country – Vatican – 800 people
Four Characteristics of a State • Territory • A state must have land
Four Characteristics of a State • Sovereignty • Sovereign states determine their own form of government
Four Characteristics of a State • Government • Government consists of the machinery and personnel by which the state is ruled.
Origins of the State • The Force Theory • A person or group forced control over an area and people
Origins of the State • The Evolutionary Theory • States originated in the family
Origins of the State • The Divine Right Theory • God gave individuals or groups the right to rule
Origins of the State • The Social Contract Theory • People agreed to give up power to the state in return for the state’s service to the general well-being of the people.
The Purpose of Government • Found in the Preamble of the United States Constitution • To Form a More Perfect Union • In union there is strength • To Establish Justice • The law should be administered reasonably, fairly, and impartially
The Purpose of Government • To Insure Domestic Tranquility • Without order, people would live in anarchy • Provide for the Common Defense • The state’s security rests on wise defense and foreign policies
The Purpose of Government • To Promote the General Welfare • The state has a responsibility to provide a variety of public services • To Secure the Blessings of Liberty • Freedom is necessary for a democracy
Forms of Government Section Two
Classifying Governments • No two governments are alike • Governments are classified in order to analyze them
Geographic Distribution of Power • Unitary Government • Power is held in a single, central agency • Can create lower levels of government and can remove them at any time • All final decisions are made by the central government • Examples are Great Britain, France, Italy
Geographic Distribution of Power • Federal Government • Powers are divided between a central agency and several local governments • Each state government is specifically protected within a written constitution • Both levels can make final decisions • Examples are the US, Canada, Germany
Geographic Distribution of Power • Confederate Government • The central government has limited power with the most important authority reserved for member states • States control the vast majority of the power • Examples are the US under the Articles and the Confederate States of America
Legislature and Executive • Presidential Government • Executive and Legislative branches are independent and co-equal • Cannot serve in both at the same time • One cannot dissolve the other
Legislature and Executive • Parliamentary government • Members of the Executive Branch are also members of the Legislative Branch • One branch can remove the other if the need arises
Number Who Can Participate • Dictatorship • Participation in government is limited to the individual or group who rules • Democracy • The people hold the power and give consent to the government to rule
Basic Concepts of Democracy Section Three
The Five Basic Concepts • The Foundations of Democracy • The fate of American democracy rests on the people’s acceptance of certain basic concepts. • The acceptance of the basic concepts of democracy presents Americans with problems and challenges.
The Five Basic Concepts • Fundamental Worth of the Individual • Democracy insists on the worth and dignity of all. • Sometimes the welfare of one person must be subordinated to the interests of the many.
The Five Basic Concepts • Equality of All Persons • Democracy insists on the equality of opportunity. • Democracy insists on equality before the law.
The Five Basic Concepts • Majority Rule and Minority Rights • Democracy argues that the majority will be right more often than wrong. • Democracy searches for satisfactory solutions to public problems. • The majority must recognize the right of the minority to become the majority.
The Five Basic Concepts • Necessity for Compromise • Compromise allows citizens to make public decisions. • Compromise is not an end in itself but a means to reach a public goal.
The Five Basic Concepts • Individual Freedom • Freedom cannot be absolute, or anarchy will result. • American democracy strives to strike a balance between liberty and authority.