The Constitution: Articles IV-VII (4-7)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
T HE C ONSTITUTION : A RTICLES IV-VII (4- 7). A RTICLE IV (4) Concerns the States All states will honor the laws of other states. If you get married in.
Advertisements

The Constitution: Articles IV-VII (4-7). Article IV (4) Concerns the States All states will honor the laws of other states. Examples: If you get married.
Constitution, Society, and Leadership Week 2 Unit 3 Anatomy of the Constitution: Articles IV-VII Christopher Dreisbach, Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University.
 Introduction to the US Constitution – 1 sentence  States where power comes from  Lists the 6 goals of US government We the People of the United States,
The United States Constitution
Warm Up : What does JUDICIAL REVIEW mean
The US Constitution. Article 1: The Legislative Branch Makes laws The Senate – 2 Senators from each state – Elected by the House of Representatives (changed.
The Constitution And its articles.
What does the 27 th amendment establish? ALD? Congress cannot give itself a pay raise during its current session Accountability Limited Government.
Government Chapter 4. Section 1 Federalism Federalism: system of government in which governmental powers are divided between the national and state governments.
Explain the significance of the following terms from Sections 8 and 9 of the Constitution as they relate to Congress: The Elastic Clause Congress can make.
Articles 4-7: The States Amendments Federal Supremacy & Ratification.
Federalism NATIONAL STATE. : Federalism: A division of power between a central and local governments…
The Constitution Article IV - The ______________________ and the _______________ _________________ Section 1 - ___________________ Records _________ _______________.
Relations Among the States/Developing Federalism.
GOVERNMENT CHAPTER 4 POWERS. LEGISLATIVE POWERS NATIONAL Delegated Expressed: Article 1 Section 8 clauses 1-17 Implied: Article 1 Section 8 clause 18.
US CONSTITUTION ARTICLES 4,5,6,7. ARTICLE 4 Relations Among the States 1. Full Faith and Credit Clause – States honor each other 2. Citizen rights carryover.
Ideals of the Constitution New Constitution Before the Constitution was written Random $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300.
The Structure of the US Constitution
Constitutional Clauses
THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION
ARTICLE I LEGISLATIVE ARTICLE II EXECUTIVE  Section 1  “legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States”  Section.
SectionSubject PreambleStates the purpose of the Constitution Article ILegislative Branch Article IIExecutive Branch Article IIIJudicial Branch Article.
Jeopardy Section1: Federalism: The Division of Powers Section 2: The National Gov’t and the 50 States Section 3: Interstate Relations PowerThe Constitution.
Preamble The Preamble states the purpose of the Constitution.
Structure of the Constitution. Preamble Establishes the purpose of the government as set up by the Constitution Establishes the purpose of the government.
The Articles of the Constitution. Article I. Establishes the first of the three branches of the government, the Legislature. The name of the Legislature.
Federalism. The Constitution supports a strong Federal (central) government Article VI of the Constitution: The Supremacy Clause This Constitution,
The Constitution: Articles IV-VII (4-7)
The Constitution & Its Parts: Ideals & Goals of the Constitution Unit 1: Foundations and Development.
James Madison helped created many of the compromises that made the Constitution possible & is referred to as the “father of the Constitution”
Says how the government works Considered the supreme law of the nation Nothing can superseded it Establishes a federal system of government The States.
7Articles of Constitution. US Constitution Preamble.
Unit 3 We the People Article I-III. Article Review Article I: Legislative Branch: all of their powers, term limits & job descriptions Article II: Executive.
State Government Goals C&G.2.1– Analyze the structure of state and local governments. C&G.2.4 – Identify the principles in the North Carolina Constitution.
Elements of the Constitution Federalism: Constitutional division of power between the national gov’t and state gov’ts. Both get powers from Constitution.
FEDERALISM. Discussion Prompt Answer the following questions: 1.Define federalism in your own words. 2.What is one advantage of having two levels of.
Essential Question How does federalism work in the United States?
The U.S. Constitution on a t-shirt!!!. Preamble -An Introduction (It’s only one sentence!) -Gives the purposes and goals of government (See next slide)
SSCG3 Students will demonstrate knowledge of the U.S. Constitution
Chapter 4: Federalism Section 1: Dividing Government Power (pg )
Chapter 4 Section 2 and Review
US CONSTITUTION ARTICLES 4,5,6,7
The Constitution SSCG4 Demonstrate knowledge of the organization and powers of the national government. Describe the structure, powers, and limitations.
The Structure of our Constitution
The Preamble & Articles
Articles 4-7.
The Structure of our Constitution
The basic set up.
Unit 1: Foundations & Dev
The Articles of the Constitution of the United States
The United States Constitution Basics & Structure.
preamble Introduction Lays out 6 goals for government:
THE CONSTITUTION.
The Constitution.
The United States Constitution Basics & Structure.
The Constitution: Articles IV-VII (4-7)
Articles.
The United States Constitution
United States Constitution September 17, 1787
Amendment I, Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause
Articles IV through VII: The Role of the Constitution
Constitutional Clauses
The Constitution: Articles IV-VII (4-7)
The Constitution The “C”
James Madison helped created many of the compromises that made the Constitution possible & is referred to as the “father of the Constitution”
US Constitution Article IV, V, VI, VII.
7 Articles of the Constitution
Unit 1: Foundations & Dev
Articles in the Constitution
Presentation transcript:

The Constitution: Articles IV-VII (4-7)

Article IV (4) Concerns the States All states will honor the laws of other states. Examples: If you get married in one state you are considered married in another. Convicted of a crime in one state you are still guilty in another, etc. Citizens in each state are treated equally. Criminals must be returned if they flee to another state. New states can be admitted (with some qualifications) Ensures a republican government for all states. Sorry Kings you’re out! Ensures the government will protect the states against foreign or domestic invasions & revolutions

Article V (5) Concerns Amending the Constitution (adding things to the Constitution or changing things). Proposed by 2/3rds of both houses or by a national convention. 3/4ths of the states must agree. Examples (banning alcohol, allowing women to vote, giving slaves freedom).

Article VI (6) Concerns the United States itself Government will assume all debts entered into by the U.S. under the Articles of Confederation. Supremacy Clause Laws passed by congress are the “supreme Law of the Land” The Constitution and federal laws are supreme when in conflict with those of other states. Requires all officers of the U.S. to swear an oath of allegiance to the U.S. & the Constitution when taking office.

Article VII (7) Details the method for ratification of the Constitution (making the Constitution law). Nine of the thirteen states had to accept it before it could go into effect. This would lead to problems!

Constitutional Clauses

Supremacy Clause Article VI Section 2 The Federal Law (US Constitution) is above all State Law States cannot make laws that conflict with US law

Necessary & Proper Clause AKA: Elastic Clause Article I Section 8 Clause 18 Gives Congress the power to make all laws necessary to carry out their expressed powers Ex. Congress can print paper money This is the foundation for all implied powers of Congress

Full Faith & Credit Clause Article IV Section 1 States must recognize the public acts, records & judicial proceedings of every other state Ex. Birth certificates & marriage licenses are recognized in all 50 states