1 / 26

BellRinger Activity

BellRinger Activity. Please grab a bellringer paper on the front desk, put your name at the top along with week of August 13-17, and answer this question under Monday: Question: Using your prior knowledge, please describe the difference (if any) between a nation, state, and country.

cathym
Download Presentation

BellRinger Activity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BellRinger Activity • Please grab a bellringer paper on the front desk, put your name at the top along with week of August 13-17, and answer this question under Monday: • Question: Using your prior knowledge, please describe the difference (if any) between a nation, state, and country.

  2. Unit 1Chapter 1Section 1 Principles of Government Mr. Young 2, 3, 4, 5 periods

  3. Essential Questions • How do the four essential features help to determine whether a land mass is a state or not? • How do the Purpose of government effect your life on a daily basis?

  4. I CAN: • Explain the difference between a country, nation, and a state. • List and define the four main purposes of government • Evaluate the major theories of the origin of the state

  5. Difference betweencountry, nation, state • Country- geography of something, where it is located

  6. Difference betweencountry, nation, state • Nation- denote the people, who lives there

  7. Difference betweencountry, nation, state • State- the political within a territory

  8. The State • State- a body of people living in a defined territory, organized politically, with the power to make and enforce laws

  9. The State • Nation-state- when the boundaries of a state and nation are the same

  10. Essentials Features of a State • There are four common essential features that make up a state in today’s society • Population • Territory • Sovereignty • Government Video: http://www.hippocampus.org/History%20%26%20Government?user=myKDE (half way)

  11. Population • Most obvious, how many people, what do they look like, etc • Also affects stability, if pop shares a general political and social consensus, agreement about basic beliefs, then government is usually stable • Also affected by mobility

  12. Territory • Basically what they own, what are there boundaries • Usually a source of major conflict • May change as a result of: • War • Negotiations • purchase

  13. Sovereignty • Key to being a state • Means that state has the supreme and absolute authority within its territorial boundaries • No state has right to interfere with other state (in theory)

  14. Government • Institution through which the state maintains social order, provides public services, and enforces decisions on all people living within the state • Derive power from two sources: • Legitimacy- willingness to obey the government • Coercive force- police, judicial, and military institutions

  15. Theories of the Origin of the State • Evolutionary Theory- Head family serves as authority, until they eventually needed more organization

  16. Theories of the Origin of the State • Force Theory- government emerged when all the people of an area were brought under the authority of one person or group.

  17. Theories of the Origin of the State • Divine Right Theory- god or gods had chosen certain people to rule. • To oppose was to oppose a god or gods and to commit sin and treason

  18. Theories of the Origin of the State • Social Contract Theory- theory that by contract, people surrender to the state the power needed to maintain order and the state, in turn agrees to protect its citizens • Important People: John Locke and Thomas Hobbes

  19. Social Contract Theory

  20. Essential Needs of a Government (6) • http://www.hippocampus.org/History%20%26%20Government?user=myKDE • From beginning

  21. The Purposes of Government • Government has many purposes, but they will all fall somewhere under these four • Maintaining social order • Providing Public Service • Providing National Security • Making Economic Decisions

  22. Maintaining Social Order • People cannot live in groups without conflicts • Provides ways of resolving conflicts among members of a group, such as making and enforcing laws

  23. Providing Public Services • Helps to provide essential services that people cannot provide by themselves • These include: • Roads • Buildings • Make and enforce laws • Public health and safety

  24. Providing National Security • Protect people from other states/nations or other threats • Helps deal with foreign nations • Major concern of sovereign state

  25. Making Economic Decisions • Governments use their power, money, and resources to help keep people happy • Also use their resources to help other nations • Try to stimulate economy to help people in struggling times

  26. Essential Questions • How do the four essential features help to determine whether a land mass is a state or not? • How do the Purpose of government effect your life on a daily basis?

More Related