Chapter 20 Section 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Protecting Individual Freedoms
Advertisements

What is Public Policy? D. K. ODell With respect to the Center for Civic Education.
Chapter 14.1 Protecting Individual Rights
Aim: What is Due Process? Do Now: Read the text of the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments. List the rights included in “due process:”
Due Process of Law How is the meaning of due process of law set out in the 5th and 14th amendments? What is police power and how does it relate to civil.
Chapter 20 Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights
Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4. The Bill of Rights– Then and Now Civil Liberties – Definition: The legal constitutional protections against.
Due Process of Law Chapter 20, Section 1.
■Essential Question ■Essential Question: –How did the decisions of the Supreme Court impact civil liberties in the 1960s & 1970s? ■Warm-Up Question: –?
Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where.
Chapter 20, Section 1: Due Process of Law
Magruder’s American Government
SECTION1 Lecture: Due Process of Law. SECTION2 Pair Share: The 5th Amendment declares that the Federal Government cannot deprive any person of “life,
+ Protecting Individual Liberties Section 1 Chapter 14.
Ch. 20, Sec. 1.  Read “What Due Process Means” p. 578  What two clauses deal with due process in the Constitution?  What do they say?
Unit 6: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights, Lesson 3 Freedom of Religion Right to Privacy To what extent has the Supreme Court expanded protections given.
Process given to you by the government.  Law of the Land  The government must respect all of the legal rights that are owed to a person  5 th – Federal.
Chapter 20: Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights Section 1
Civil Liberties and Public Policy. The Bill of Rights– Then and Now Civil Liberties – Definition: The legal constitutional protections against the government.
Civil Liberties and Public Policy
Bell Work: 5/8/13 What is seditious speech? What is prior restraint?
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4  4 th -8 th Amendments Edwards, Wattenberg,
Political Science American Government and Politics Today Chapter 4 Civil Liberties.
Chapter 4 The Supreme Court and the Constitution
D UE P ROCESS. The government cannot deny you life, liberty, or property without due process … what is due process? No solid definition Due Process- the.
Chapter Four: Civil Liberties 1. Learning Objectives Understand the meaning of civil liberties. Understand how the Bill of Rights came to be applied to.
Constitutional Rights Domestic Policy. What is domestic Policy? Domestic Policy is everything that deals with our homeland, such a taxes, education, and.
Section 1 Due Process of Law 2 due process guarantees: Procedural & Substantive Due Process Definitions are vague.
CHAPTER 20 Due Process of Law How is the meaning of due process of law set out in the 5th and 14th amendments? What is police power and how does it relate.
Civil Liberties and Public Policy. The Bill of Rights- Then and Now Civil Liberties are individual and legal constitutional protections against the government.
Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4. The Bill of Rights– Then and Now Civil Liberties – Definition: The legal constitutional protections against.
 Government, including states, cannot unreasonably discriminate against individuals; the government must treat people equally.
Roe v. Wade (1973) Mr. Burgs Period 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, and 7 2/2/16.
Chapter 20: Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights Section 1.
Chapter 19 Section 5 Objective: To understand the limits on the freedoms of assembly and petition.
Is there a right to PRIVACY in the Constitution? Most people think there is. Prove it. *Hint: Look in the Amendments. What do you expect to keep private?
WEEK 8: THE ABORTION DEBATE. Agenda ■1. Review- ■2. Lesson- ■3. Lake of Fire Documentary- 45.
PROTECTIONS PROVIDED BY THE CONSTITUTION UNIT II – CONSTITUTION AND RIGHTS.
CH DUE PROCESS OF LAW ADVANCED AMERICAN GOVERNMENT CHAPTER 20 – CIVIL LIBERTIES: PROTECTING INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS.
Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights Chapter 20.
CHAPTER 20 Due Process of Law How is the meaning of due process of law set out in the 5th and 14th amendments? What is police power and how does it relate.
Due Process of Law CHAPTER 20
Substantive Due Process
Chapter 4 Constitutional Law for Business and Online Commerce
Magruder’s American Government
Criminal Law Protections
Section 3 Due Process and the Fourteenth Amendment
Supreme Court Activity: You Decide
Due Process and Personal Freedom
Define! What is “Due Process?”
Civil Liberties and Public Policy
Landmark Supreme Court cases
Chapter 19: Civil Liberties: First Amendment Freedoms Opener
Chapter 20: Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights Section 1
Right to Privacy.
Chapter 20: Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights Section 1
Criminal Law Protections
D. K. O’Dell With respect to the Center for Civic Education
Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Liberties
Essential Question: How did the decisions of the Supreme Court impact civil liberties in the 1960s & 1970s? Warm-Up Question: ?
Essential Question: How did the decisions of the Supreme Court impact civil liberties in the 1960s & 1970s?
American Government Chapter 20 Section 1.
Chapter 10: States Powers
Chap 4 Day 5, Aim: How does the court interpret “privacy”?
Turbulent Times (The 1960s and 1970s
Essential Question: How did the decisions of the Supreme Court impact civil liberties in the 1960s & 1970s?
Chapter 12 Section 1 Civics Mr. Collins and Mrs. Kozlik CE 6a
Essential Question: How did the decisions of the Supreme Court impact civil liberties in the 1960s & 1970s? Warm-Up Question: ?
Protecting Constitutional Rights
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 20 Section 1

Due Process The US government cannot act in an unfair manner or disobey established rules. Substantive due process deals with the procedures of government action and procedural due process deals with the policies of government action. People must be given due process.

Police Power The States have police power which is the authority to protect and promote the public safety. The police power sometimes conflicts with civil rights protection. Drinking and driving has been a big debate. The courts have always come down on the side of the police.

Police Power States can limit the sale of alcoholic beverages and tobacco. States can forbid concealed weapons, and require the use of seatbelts. States can outlaw gambling and the sale of obscene materials.

Right Of Privacy People have the right to be free from unwanted government intrusions into one’s private life. Roe v Wade was the landmark case in this right. This gave women the right to have an abortion is the first trimester and limited abortions in the second trimester.