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Problems of Democracy Ms. Nestico Chapter 1

Problems of Democracy

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Problems of Democracy. Ms. Nestico Chapter 1. What is Democracy?. Form of government “Rule by the people” Representative or Direct? People have the right to vote Democrat or Republican - political parties Freedom or right to choose. Chapter 1, Section 1. Functions of Government - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Problems of  Democracy

Problems of Democracy

Ms. NesticoChapter 1

Page 2: Problems of  Democracy

What is Democracy?

Form of government “Rule by the people” Representative or Direct? People have the right to vote Democrat or Republican - political

parties Freedom or right to choose

Page 3: Problems of  Democracy

Chapter 1, Section 1

Functions of Government

1. Make Laws -- Legislative2. Enforce Laws -- Executive3. Interpret & Change Laws - Judicial

Page 4: Problems of  Democracy

Purposes of Governmentwhat is governments responsibility to its citizens?

1. Maintain Order2. Provide Services3. Protect Us

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Maintaining Order

How does the government maintain order?

Police Courts FBI/CIA Congress and making laws

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Providing Services

Welfare - cash assistance Food Stamps Healthcare

--Medicaid/Medicare--Medical Assistance (MA)

• Social Security• Education• Transportation• Regulatory Agencies

--EPA, FDA, FCC• Employment

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Protecting Us

Military Homeland Security Jails/Detention Facilities Police and Fire Departments

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I. Origins of Government

Aristotle - ancient Greek philosopher 384-322 BCE

Coined the term “polis” or city-state--refers to ancient Greek government

-- serves as the basis for democracy

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Characteristics of a “state”(Based on Aristotle’s definition)

The term “state” is interchangeable with: country, nation or city-state

1. People - population2. Territory3. Government4. Sovereignty - the ability to rule oneself

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II. Division of Political Authority - Aristotle

1. Distribution of Powera. Unitary systemb. Confederate Systemc. Federal System

2. Economic 3. Who Rulesa. Capitalist a. autocracyb. Socialist b. oligarchyc. Communist c. democracy

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Distribution of Power how does power flow?A. Unitary System

one central government with full authority over all political subdivisions or states

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B. Confederate System states are sovereign and individual

but are all working toward a common goal; central

government has limited power

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C. Federal System

power is shared between a central government and its political subdivisions

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Capitalism

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Socialism

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Communism

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Who/How Many Rule?

A. Autocracy - one ruler1. Dictatorship - single ruler with absolute power.

--no elections--may use force to maintain control

2. Monarchy - single ruler who gains leadership through inheritance

--some have absolute power but not common today

-- Saudi Arabia - example

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3. Despotism - rule by a single authority who holds all the

power and everyone else is considered his slave

Implies tyrannical rule

4. Authoritarian Rule by a single authority who requires strict

obedience to the state Maintains social control through oppressive

measures (limits resources provided to the people).

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5. Totalitarian The state regulates virtually every

aspect of public and private behavior Maintain power and control by extreme

measures Examples:

secret policepropagandacontrol of mass media restriction of free discussionwidespread use of terror

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What is the difference between authoritarianism and

totalitarianism?

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6. Absolutism - one person withabsolute power

from the time of the “nature of law” and “divine right of kings”

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Divine Right Theory

Identified in the 1600’s Thomas Hobbes wrote Leviathan

(1651-1690) in which divine right is initially discussed

Divine right = a king’s or ruler’s power comes directly from God

Focus on the ruler, not the people

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Social Contract Theory

Identifies that people do have rights Focus is on the people, not the ruler Government should actually be an

“agreement” or “contract” between a people and its government

Based on Natural Rights - the “nature of law”

Social Contract Theory is extended to acknowledge that people have natural rights:

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Natural Rights:Life, Liberty & Property

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Social Contract Theory (con’t.)

John Locke - Two Treaties of Government (1690)

Social contract theory extended further to assume that people agree to obey the government in exchange for the government providing services and protection for the people.

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Key to the beginning of US Government: John Locke’s Social Contract Theory says that if the government does not hold up its end of the agreement, people have the right to break the “contract” and revolt

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B. Oligarchy - a few/small group of rulers

1. Totalitarianism - small group that rules the government that takes over virtually every aspect of people’s lives.

2. Junta - small military group seizes power and begins their own government

3. Aristocracy - rule by an elite upper class (our founding fathers)

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4. Meritocracy - people with the highest IQ and effort/ability to rule.

5. Plutocracy - rule by the wealthy6. Technocracy - run by the highly

educated who believe that major business should have the most say in government

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7. Theocracy - rulers rule on behalf of God and religion

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C. Democracy - rule by the people

1. Republic - elected officials vote on policy issues/representatives of the people conduct the government’s business

2. Direct Democracy - every man has a say or vote on every issue

3. Representative Democracy - synonymous with “republic”

4. Social Democracy - capitalist democracy begins incorporating aspects of socialism into its government practices & economy - “controlled capitalism”

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Citizenship - 14th Amendment

A. US Citizenship Rights1. Vote2. Serve on a jury3. Hold public office4. Public Services/Education5. Own property/business6. Due Process/legal protection

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B. Obligations of US Citizen1. Pay taxes

2. Obey the law

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C. Ways to Be a US Citizen

1. Jus soli - “of the soil” --anyone born on US territory (military bases, embassies,

etc.)

2. Jus sanguinis -- “of blood” --when both parents are US

citizens

--if at least one parent has been a

citizen for a minimum of 10 yrs.

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3. Naturalization(requirements)

a. Ability to read, write and speak English

b. Good moral characterc. Working knowledge of Civics/US

Historyd. 5 years of permanent residency

(3 years if married to a US citizen)e. Favorable disposition toward the US & the Constitution.

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Citizenship Status

1. Legal Aliena. Permanent resident - lives here permanently, has a green card and is working toward citizenshipb. Non-resident - here temporarily, usually for work or education

F-1 Visa = Student visaH-1 Visa = work visa

c. Illegal Alien - obvious