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CHAPTER 1 Principles of Government

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1 CHAPTER 1 Principles of Government
 Government  Unitary Government  Majority Rule  Autocracy  Federal Government  Compromise Democracy  Confederate Government  Citizen Representative Democracy  Free Enterprise System  What basic powers does every government hold? What four characteristics make up a state, and what does each one mean? What key purposes of our government were established in the Preamble to the constitution?

2 CHAPTER 1 Principles of Government
Government: The institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies. Autocracy: A form of government in which a single person holds unlimited political power. Democracy: A form of government in which the supreme authority rests with the people.

3 CHAPTER 1 Principles of Government
Representative Democracy: System of government in which public policies are made by officials selected by the voters and held accountable in periodic elections. Unitary Government: A centralized government in which all government powers belong to a single, central agency. Federal Government: A form of government in which powers are divided between a central government and several local governments.

4 CHAPTER 1 Principles of Government
Confederate Government: A joining of several groups for a common purpose. Majority Rule: In a democracy, the majority of the people will be right more often than they will be wrong, and will be right more often than will any one person or small group. Compromise: An adjustment of opposing principles or systems by modifying some aspect of each.

5 CHAPTER 1 Principles of Government
Citizen: A member of a state or nation who owes allegiance to it by birth or naturalization and is entitled to full civil rights. Free Enterprise System: An economic system characterized by private or corporate ownership of capital goods; investments that are determined by private decision rather than by state control, and determined in a free market.

6 CHAPTER 2 Origins of American Government
 Limited Government  Virginia Plan Due Process  New Jersey Plan Popular Sovereignty  Connecticut Compromise Declaration of Independence  Ratification Articles of Confederation  The Constitution What are the four different sections that make up the Declaration of Independence? Identify key strengths and weaknesses to the Articles of Confederation? What different beliefs did the Federalists and Anti-Federalists hold?

7 CHAPTER 2 Origins of American Government
Limited Government: Basic principle of American government which states that government is restricted in what it may do, and each individual has rights that government cannot take away. Due Process: The government must act fairly and in accord with established rules in all that it does.

8 CHAPTER 2 Origins of American Government
Popular Sovereignty: Basic principle of the American system of government which asserts that the people are the source of any and all governmental power, and government can exist only with the consent of the governed. Declaration of Independence: July 4th, 1776, the unanimous declaration of the thirteen United States of America. It is composed of 4 parts: Preamble, Declaration of Natural Rights, List of Grievances, and a Resolution of Independence.

9 CHAPTER 2 Origins of American Government
Articles of Confederation: plan of government adopted by the Continental Congress after the American Revolution; established “a firm league of friendship” among the States, but allowed few important powers to the central government. Virginia Plan: plan presented by delegates from Virginia at the Constitutional Convention; called for a three-branch government with a bicameral legislature in which each State’s membership would be determined by its population or its financial support for the central government.

10 CHAPTER 2 Origins of American Government
New Jersey Plan: Plan presented as an alternative to the Virginia Plan at the Constitutional Convention; called for a unicameral legislature in which each State would be equally represented. Connecticut Compromise: Agreement during the Constitutional Convention that Congress should be composed of a Senate, in which States would be represented equally, and a House, in which representation would be based on a State’s population.

11 CHAPTER 2 Origins of American Government
Ratification: Formal approval, final consent to the effectiveness of a constitution, constitutional amendment, or treaty. The Constitution: Created by the Framers, the constitution is a bunch of compromises that make up the outline and laws of our government. It was ratified on September 17th, 1787.

12 CHAPTER 3 The Constitution
Amendment  Bill of Rights  Ratification  Checks and Balances   How do the first three articles of the Constitution differ from the last four? What is the common process that an amendment goes through Before being added to the Constitution?

13 CHAPTER 3 The Constitution
Amendment: A change in, or addition to, a constitution or law. Ratification: Formal approval, final consent to the effectiveness of a constitution, constitutional amendment, or treaty.

14 CHAPTER 3 The Constitution
Bill of Rights: The first ten amendments to the Constitution. Checks and Balances: System of overlapping the powers of the legislative, executive, and judicial branches to permit each branch to check the actions of the other.

15 CHAPTER 4 Federalism Federalism  Inherent Powers
 Implied Powers  Concurrent Powers  Expressed Powers  Republican Government Why are powers in the United States government often Split between national and state governments?

16 CHAPTER 4 Federalism Federalism: A system of government in which a written constitution divides power between central, or national, government and several regional governments. Implied Powers: Those delegated powers of the National Government that are suggested by the expressed powers set out in the Constitution; those “necessary and proper” to carry out the expressed powers.

17 CHAPTER 4 Federalism Expressed Powers: Those delegated powers of the National Government that are spelled out, expressly, in the Constitution; also called the “enumerated powers.” Inherent Powers: Powers the Constitution is presumed to have delegated to the National Government because it is the government of a sovereign state within the world community.

18 CHAPTER 4 Federalism Concurrent Powers: Those powers that both the National Government and the States possess and exercise. Republican Government: Means the same as “representative government” – system of government in which public policies are made by officials selected by the voters and held accountable in periodic elections.


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