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Introduction to Government

Introduction to Government. Questions to consider…. What is the role of government? What are the functions of government? How can government achieve these?. Purpose of Government. Social Contract Hobbes – control chaos (preferably a sovereign king) Enforce laws Punish criminals

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Introduction to Government

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  1. Introduction to Government

  2. Questions to consider… • What is the role of government? • What are the functions of government? • How can government achieve these?

  3. Purpose of Government • Social Contract • Hobbes – control chaos (preferably a sovereign king) • Enforce laws • Punish criminals • Defend from invasion • Locke – guarantee peoples’ natural rights • Make laws • People agree to follow those laws • Punish criminals • No restrictions on citizens without consent

  4. What are the functions of a government system?(Do you remember the Preamble?) Protect people from each other and outsiders Protect individual rights and liberties Protect public goods and services (general welfare) whole – parks, environment, commerce select groups – welfare, medicare/medicaid, ag subsidies

  5. What gives a government its power? The consent of the governed!

  6. How does a government assume its role and functions? • Power • the ability of one person to cause another person to act in accordance with the first person’s intentions • Authority • the right to use power • Legitimacy • political authority conferred by law or by a state or national constitution

  7. The Children’s Story • Silently read the short story “The Children’s Story.” • As you read, consider the concepts of power, authority and legitimacy. • Make annotation to further discuss this article in groups and with the class.

  8. The Children’s Story(Discussion Questions) • What do you think Clavell’s major point was in writing this short story? • What does the story have to say about the role of education and governmental power, authority and citizenship? (legitimacy?) • What traditions did the New Teacher remove? Why do you think this was done?

  9. What is Government? • Formal institutions that make policy or laws on behalf of the people • Modern governments do 3 things: -National defense/ public order -Public goods -Tax

  10. What is Politics? • Politics is who gets what, when and how. • characterized by conflict and resolution, compromise, and the relationship between individuals and groups. • Conflict arises because of : • Scarcity – finite resources • Values – people see issues in different ways • Politics is the process through which society makes its decisions.

  11. In pairs… • On an index card, respond to the following: • 1. Give an example of each: • Power • Authority • Legitimacy • 2. Compare the institutions that have power over you with the institutions that have authority over you. What are the characteristics that distinguish one set of institutions from another? • 3. How are government and politics different?

  12. How do citizens get involved? • Linkage Institutions - how people are able to link up with public policies • Political parties, elections, the media, interest groups, etc. • Must be accessible!

  13. Public Policy • Actions that help, defend, prosecute, etc. citizens at home or enemies abroad • Policy and law are not necessarily the same thing… • Law - 65 is the speed limit • Policy – at what speed do drivers get pulled over?

  14. In pairs… • Copy down the chart that follows. • Fill in the “example” column using your knowledge of U.S. history and American government.

  15. Public Policy

  16. Public Policy

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