Civics/Government of Latin America

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Presentation transcript:

Civics/Government of Latin America SS6CG1-2 Governments of Latin America Civics/Government of Latin America SS6CG1 The student will compare and contrast various forms of government. a. Describe the ways government systems distribute power: unitary, confederation, and federal. b. Explain how governments determine citizen participation: autocratic, oligarchic, and democratic. c. Describe the two predominate forms of democratic governments: parliamentary and presidential.

CG1a-How Gov’t Systems Distribute Power 1. Unitary The state has power to create cities/counties or to break them up & dissolve the governments if it desires Ex. Cuba, Bolivia, US state of Georgia

CG1a-How Gov’t Systems Distribute Power 2. Confederation Voluntary membership for defense, trade, common currency Most or all members must agree to decisions/changes & members can veto=WEAK central government Ex. US Articles of Confederation 1777-1787 (Constitution of US=federal gov’t)

CG1a-How Gov’t Systems Distribute Power 3. Federal Power divided between central gov’t & small divisions such as states Document (constitution) describes rights, responsibilities, & duties of central gov’t & states=POWERFUL central gov’t Cannot dissolve states or choose leaders States cannot declare war-only central gov’t Ex. Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela

Draw a line to separate your notes. Heading= CG1b-Citizen Participation

CG1b-Citizen Participation 1. Autocratic/Autocracy Power is held by ONE person- Sometimes inherited, sometimes taken by military force 3 types: Dictatorship (Hitler) Constitutional Monarchy (UK) Absolute Monarchy

CG1b-Citizen Participation 2. Oligarchic/Oligarchy Power is held by FEW (family, clan) – Power comes from wealth, social status, or military power Elections held – only 1 candidate Ex. Ancient Greece & Rome

CG1b-Citizen Participation 3. Democratic/Democracy Power is held by THE PEOPLE – Individual freedom & equality is valued 2 types: Direct Democracy (Ancient Athens) – People vote on ALL issues Representative Democracy (Republic, USA) – Representatives elected by people vote

Draw a line to separate your notes. Heading= CG1c-Democratic Governments

CG1c-Democratic Governments 1. Parliamentary Democracy Citizens elect members of parliament (MP’s) MP’s elect leader among themselves called Prime Minister=chief executive Chief Ex heads military, enforces laws, and keep country running Head of state=symbolic leader (king/queen) Ex. Australia, Canada, UK

CG1c-Democratic Governments 2. Presidential Democracy Citizens elect members of legislature Chief Ex. & head of state=president President runs gov’t & heads military Legislature makes laws Ex. US, Mexico, Most South Am. countries

Draw a line to separate your notes. Heading= CG2a-Latin Am. Gov’t

CG2a-Latin American Gov’t 1. Federative Republic of Brazil System = Federal Power divided between central gov’t & state and local gov’t Citizen Participation = Presidential Democracy Right to vote: 18-70=required to vote, optional for 16-17 & 70+ Average level of freedom – personal property rights are not always protected & court system cannot be trusted in all cases

CG2a-Latin American Gov’t 2. United Mexican States System = Federal Power divided between central gov’t & state and local gov’t Citizen Participation = Presidential Democracy Right to vote: 18+ may vote Average level of freedom – court system controlled by central gov’t, not independent of president

CG2a-Latin American Gov’t 3. Republic of Cuba System = Unitary Communist party controls the strong central gov’t & smaller units in country Citizen Participation = Communist Dictatorship People vote for National Assembly of People’s Power which appoints president – Communist Party must approve all candidates Right to vote: 16+ may vote One of least free countries in world - Gov’t controls nearly all aspects of life (property, businesses, factories, farms)