Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Unit 1 Gov
- philosophies influencing the founders
- judeo-christian ideas
- private morality= focus (one's individual relation w/ god)
Anmerkungen:
- (rather than public morality)
Public morality: moral standards/virtues that are important for acting in the community
Private morality: inner moral standards (ex--inner faith/ obedience to god)
- deeds done due to private morality may benefit society as a whole
- stressed importance of every human, rather than the society as a whole/greater community
- in part how founders found ideas of individual liberties/rights
- Greco-Roman ideas
- overarching: Classical Republicanism
- those who govern must be wise, help people learn about/perform their duties
- Small, homogeneous communities
- capitalism
Anmerkungen:
- an economic system where goods are privately owned and distributed for profit
- focus on private profit/individual gain
- enlightenment ideas
- john locke
- thomas hobbes
- social contract theory
Anmerkungen:
- (gov protects to give rights-- ppl have to give up some personal
freedoms)
- forms of gov they had to choose from (todays gov has all 3)
- rule by 1: president
- rule by few: supreme court
- rule by many: congress
- got from aristotle
- democracy (direct)
- problem: "unwashed masses" vote based on passion, not reason
- can cause unrest
- (mostly wealthy founders afraid poor would vote for something making them lose wealth)
- aristotle's name for a negative rule by many
- republic (indirect/representative democracy)
- vote for representatives to vote for elected officials
- vote not for what is popular, but what is right
- gov must exist to protect the rights to life, liberty, and estate (natural rights)
- Gov should be servant of the people (help not rule)
- Must be a higher law or constitution that limits gov
- events/documents/situational characteristics influencing the founders
- documents (in order of age)
- magna carta
Anmerkungen:
- great charter (direct translation)
- 1215
- Limit to excessive taxing
- Even king had to obey law (Rule of law)
- Ancient liberties and free customs reintroduced
- Required him to write up an agreement w/ the rest of england,
and overall fair compensation for wrongs done to them
- writ of habeas- corpus
Anmerkungen:
- a charter signed by king john promising that the king would
give his subjects more thought/respect-- have more rights
- english bill of rights
Anmerkungen:
- Limiting of king’s power to raise money
- Freedom of speech
- Rule of law
- Representation in gov of each class-- monarchy 1, house of lords few, house of commons many
- petition of right
Anmerkungen:
- says Parliament is supreme and king’s power is limited (parlimentary supremacy)
- events
- the renaissance
Anmerkungen:
- 14th-17th century revival of intellectual life
- lead to the enlightenment/scientific revolution
- A lot of advancement in science, also influenced study of gov
- ideas about gov/state of nature founded on basis that human behavior could be understood,
predicted, and controlled (figured out through advances in science)
- Individuals began to be seen as more important than their class from birth
- More opportunity-- sparked interest in the rights of individuals
- the reformation
Anmerkungen:
- Protestant revolution: ppl believed the roman catholic church had become corrupt and left it
- helped lead to rise of indiviualism
- about colonial america
- Diversity in different colonies provided many of
the people who tried to design the constitutional
gov w/ different experiences
- north raised livestock
- south did cash crops (tobacco, indigo) with
slavery
- important documents
- articles of confederation
- created after dec of indep: used as inspiration during revolutionary war
- many flaws...
- federal government had no power to enforce laws
- and no way to force the collection of taxes
- this meant that there was no way to pay back those who had served in the revolutionary war
- many of these people= farmers, had their farms forclosed on by banks
- incited Shay's Rebellion
Anmerkungen:
- not the only rebellion that happened of this sort, but for some reason the one we tend to remember
- eventually stopped by mass. militia
- many of the state millitiamen were the ones rebelling
- other states refused to help: central govt. couldn't make
them/ had no army of its own
- highlighted need for a more powerful central govt
- example of problem with democracy: masses ruled by passion, not reason
- declaration of independence
- the constitution
- constitution def: a higher law which sets forward the structures and powers of government, and
dictates the rules and processes that must be followed by the government and people
- constitutional govt: a government that adheres to the powers dictated in the constitution (not total power)
- Must set forth basic rights of citizens
- Gives gov responsibility to protect individual rights
- Establishes limits on how govs can use power (in regard to rights of citizens)
- Can be changed
- foundation ideas of gov (6)
Anmerkungen:
- all ideas of the founders: 5 of them can be found in the constitution...
- Judicial review, the only one that isn't, is called implied or inherent power
- To this day, each principle can be found in the day-to-day activities of our government.
- checks and balances
- The powers that each branch has over the others
Anmerkungen:
- each branch can "police" the other 2
- seperation of powers
- Baron de Montesquieu
- The idea that the jobs of a government should not be in the same hands; this threatens personal rights/ could create tyranny
- 3 branches of govt
- create laws (legislative)
- enforce laws (executive)
- interpret laws (judicial)
- judicial review
- Power of the courts to declare acts of Congress or the President “unconstitutional”
- Importance of judicial review
Anmerkungen:
- While some studies show a limited impact of the courts on policy, they have the potential to decide questions that could change our lives
- Many rights we enjoy were guaranteed by the Supreme Court: legal rights, abortion, desegregation, miranda rights etc.
- The potential for legal action to change the way we live or the way our freedoms are enjoyed exists
- limited government
- Idea that government should be limited (in what it can and cannot do) by law(s)
- Still not cut and dry: otherwise no need for supreme court
Anmerkungen:
- ex: Trump and the muslim ban
- idea for limited govt comes largely from british history
Anmerkungen:
- (in general as well as these documents)
- example of this: the fact that we have a Constitution that explains
what our government can and cannot do
- federalism
- popular sovereignty
Anmerkungen:
- Sovereignty— “authority to govern”
popular-- by the people
- Connects with social contract theory
Anmerkungen:
- (gov protects to give rights-- ppl have to give up some personal
freedoms)
- “rule by the people”
- The authority given to the government to do its job comes from the people
- popular sovereignty examples
- voting
- protests
- politicians respondent to people
Anmerkungen:
- theory: they will be bc if not, wont be reelected
- Case work example: traveling abroad, loose passport, won’t let you out… parents call senator, if they do it (the favor)-- everyone is happy, parents will vote for official who helped-- probably petition, be active supporters, tell their story (social media)
- (formal petition to reps-- calling/writing letters to representative…
petition government for redress of grievances