Jeopardy SpeechReligionAssemblyPress Cases Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
LIBERTY PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS
Advertisements

Magruder’s American Government
Civil Liberties and the 1 st Amendment. The Bill of Rights and the State Barron v. Baltimore (1833) Barron v. Baltimore (1833) – While the Bill of Rights.
Constitutional Freedoms.  Human Rights- fundamental freedoms  Constitutional Freedoms ◦ Bill of Rights  First 10 amendments ◦ Incorporation  Applying.
Civil Liberties: First Amendment Freedoms
First Amendment Freedoms Freedom of Religion –Two Clauses involved Establishment Clause – your belief –“wall of separation between church and state” –Not.
Constitutional Freedoms. Constitutional Rights  The Constitution guarantees the basic rights of United States citizens in the Bill of Rights.  Today,
Civil Liberties: The First Amendment. Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments to Constitution Part of the “Deal” to Obtain State Ratification of Constitution.
Freedom of Religion AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. As Stated The first and fourteenth amendments set out two guarantees concerning religious freedom in the United.
Chapter Review. Clause of the First Amendment which states the government may not support a church or religion.
1 st Amendment. Freedom of Religion The Establishment Clause – “Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion…” – Lemon v. Kurtzman.
AP Government Order & Civil Liberties: 1 st Amendment.
Freedom of Religion. Establishment Clause Establishment Clause- “Congress shall make no law respecting an established religion” Free Exercise Clause-
 Freedom of the Press is guaranteed by the first amendment  Protects from government censorship of reading materials, television, and film  Censorship-When.
As an American citizen, what is your most important right? Why?
The First Amendment The fundamental freedoms of being an American.
Writ of Certiorari-petition filed with the Supreme Court to request a review of a case. Rule of 4 Conference-Full Consideration Oral Arguments: Lawyers.
1 st Amendment Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, or abridging the freedom of.
Chapter 19 Ben Eric Craig 5 th Hour AP Gov. Section 1.
Jeopardy Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Chapter 19: Civil Liberties: First Amendment Freedoms Section 3
Chapter 4 Civil Liberties.  Pages Thursday’s Reading.
Human Rights This concept lies at the heart of the United States political system and enables citizens and noncitizens to worship, speak, read and write.
Jeopardy Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
ORDER AND CIVIL LIBERTIES Unit Four, Chapter 15. Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments of the US Constitution Limits on the national government but not on.
Civil Liberties First Amendment Freedoms. Two Types of Protections  1. Civil liberties- constitutionally based freedoms guaranteed to individuals – Example.
FREEDOM OF RELIGION.
+ Constitutional Rights and Freedom of Religion Chapter 13, Sections 1-2.
The 1 st Amendment. Our Rights… Relative NOT Absolute Ex- Everyone has freedom of speech, but, no one has absolute 100% freedom of speech You have rights.
Freedom of Religion 1 st Amendent. Establishment Clause  “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.”  Idea that the government.
Civil Liberties C.M. Stickney ©2010. Establishment / Free Exercise Clauses of the 1 st Amendment “Congress Shall make no laws respecting an establishment.
The First Amendment Freedom of Religion.
Freedom of the Press Freedom of Assembly, Association, and Petition Unit 6: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights, Lesson 2 How has the Supreme Court expanded.
Chapter 40 Freedom of Religion. Protected by the 1 st Amendment Establishment Clause: –forbids the government from setting up a state religion –from endorsing.
1 ST AMENDMENT Freedom of Religion. 2 RELIGION CLAUSES Establishment Clause Free Exercise Clause.
Freedom of Press and Assembly Chapter 13 Section 4 and 5.
What are civil liberties?
Essential Question How does the Constitution protect citizen rights?
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4  1 st Amendment Edwards, Wattenberg, and Lineberry.
Civil Liberties: The First Amendment Freedoms Chapter 19.
1 st Amendment Rights. History of the Bill of Rights Constitution was ratified without the Bill of Rights (1789) Amendments were added These amendments.
Jumpstart Assignment Describe the political cartoon below. Describe the political cartoon below.
CIVIL RIGHTS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES 1 ST AMENDMENT CIVIL RIGHTS V. CIVIL LIBERTIES CIVIL RIGHTS CIVIL RIGHTS Positive acts of gov’t that make constitutional.
 CIVIL RIGHTS  “Fair and Equal” status and treatment from the government  Right to participate in the government  Basic right to be free from unequal.
A Commitment to Freedom The listing of the general rights of the people can be found in the first ten amendments in the Constitution, also known as the.
HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON A MERICAN GOVERNMENT HOLT 1 Fundamental Freedoms Section 1: Freedom and the Bill of Rights Section 2: Freedom of Religion Section.
1 st Amendment When can my 1 st Amendment right to religious freedom and freedom of speech be limited.
Ch. 13 sec 2 FREEDOM OF RELIGION Objective; Describe the parts of the First Amendment that guarantee religious freedom.
Government Chapter 13 Civil Liberties We skipped 12, deal with it. Not 58 terms.
What is argued in the dissenting opinion?.  Which message is Constitutional?
Government. Chapter 19 Section 1 Objectives 1.Explain how American’s commitment to freedom led to the creation of the Bill of Rights. 2.Understand that.
Constitutional Freedoms. “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the.
19.2 – Freedom of Religion. - Protections against the arbitrary acts of the government are technically known as ___. -separation or isolation of a racial.
Freedom of Religion. Establishment Clause 1 st Amendment prohibits Congress from passing laws “respecting an establishment of religion” Establishes the.
Constitutional Rights
CHAPTER 19 1ST AMENDMENT Read the following notes and answer the questions on a separate sheet. You need to discuss each question with your group.
What was the Bill of Rights originally intended for?
Civil Liberties: First Amendment Freedoms
Unit 2 Civil Liberties & Civil Rights
The First Amendment Freedom of Religion
Incorporation of the First Amendment
Court Cases.
The First Amendment.
Civil Rights & Liberties
This section focuses on prior restraint and other free press issues.
Constitutional Freedoms
Constitutional rights
Chap 4 Day 2- Aim: How are Civil Liberties Protected or Limited?
Freedom of Religion Freedom of Expression
Civil Liberties September 8, 2008.
Presentation transcript:

Jeopardy SpeechReligionAssemblyPress Cases Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy

$100 Question from H1 If you advocate Revolution you will be punished for?

$100 Answer from H1 Sedition

$200 Question from H1 What is false speech?

$200 Answer from H1 Defamatory Speech

$300 Question from H1 What amendment is speech found in?

$300 Answer from H1 The 1st

$400 Question from H1 What is a right labor unions have?

$400 Answer from H1 To express Free Speech by picketing

$500 Question from H1 The Supreme Court has said that Prior Restraint is permitted only when?

$500 Answer from H1 National Security is at stake

$100 Question from H2 What is a another name for a Private Christian School?

$100 Answer from H2 Parochial School

$200 Question from H2 What case deals with Parochial Schools?

$200 Answer from H2 Everson vs. Board of Education

$300 Question from H2 What is Jefferson’s famous contribution to Freedom of Religion?

$300 Answer from H2 The Wall of Seperation

$400 Question from H2 What is the Establishment Clause?

$400 Answer from H2 Government cannot establish a religion

$500 Question from H2 What case declared Prayer in schools illegal?

$500 Answer from H2 Engel vs. Vitale

$100 Question from H3 How do we protect our rights in this Country?

$100 Answer from H3 By Using them!

$200 Question from H3 What did Cox vs. New Hampshire Require?

$200 Answer from H3 Permits for Parades

$300 Question from H3 Thornhill Vs Alabama gave people What protected right?

$300 Answer from H3 The right to picket

$400 Question from H3 Who won the 1998 Super Bowl?

$400 Answer from H3 The Denver Broncos!

$500 Question from H3 What movie won best picture this year?

$500 Answer from H3 The King’s Speech

$100 Question from H4 What regulates radio and television?

$100 Answer from H4 The FCC

$200 Question from H4 What did Turner Broadcasting vs FCC take away from cable operators?

$200 Answer from H4 First Amendment Protection

$300 Question from H4 Near vs. Minnesota limited Governments Power in what way?

$300 Answer from H4 To limit press stories before they are printed

$400 Question from H4 What did Hustler Magazine do to Jerry Farwell?

$400 Answer from H4 Committed Libel against him

$500 Question from H4 What was the result of Hustler Magazine vs. Farewell?

$500 Answer from H4 Farwell lost since he was a Public figure

$100 Question from H5 What two amendments were used In Dejonge v. Oregon?

$100 Answer from H5 1 st and 14th

$200 Question from H5 What other rights were granted to the People in Dejonge v. Oregon?

$200 Answer from H5 The right to join Subversive Groups

$300 Question from H5 This case required that you obtain A permit before you can have a parade

$300 Answer from H5 Cox v. New Hampshire

$400 Question from H5 This case ruled that public school Districts cannot let students lead stadium Prayer at football games

$400 Answer from H5 Santa Fe Independent S.D. v. Doe

$500 Question from H5 What clause did the court use to justify its decision in Reynolds v. United States

$500 Answer from H5 Establishment Clause

Final Jeopardy What are the three parts of the Lemon Test, And why is it important to the Supreme Court?

Final Jeopardy Answer 1.It can neither advance nor inhibit religion 2.Must have a clear secular, nonreligious purpose 3.It must avoid “excessive government entanglement with religion It is crucial to the court due to the fact that it gives Them a guideline with how to decide establishment Clause cases.