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Chapter 1

Chapter 1. Government and the State. What is Government. Government is the institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies. Every Government has and exercises three basic kinds of power:. Legislative power: power to make law and to frame public policies.

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Chapter 1

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  1. Chapter 1 Government and the State

  2. What is Government Government is the institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies.

  3. Every Government has and exercises three basic kinds of power: Legislative power: power to make law and to frame public policies. Executive power: power to execute, enforce and administer law Judicial power: power to interpret laws, to determine their meaning, and to settle disputes that arise within the society.

  4. Four Characteristics of the State

  5. Major Political Ideas • The Force Theory • The Evolutionary Theory • The Divine Right Theory • The Social Contract Theory

  6. The Force Theory • The force theory states that one person or a small group took control of an area and forced all within it to submit to that person’s or group’s rule. The Evolutionary Theory • The evolutionary theory argues that the state evolved naturally out of the early family. The Divine Right Theory • The theory of divine right holds that God created the state and that God gives those of royal birth a “divine right” to rule. The Social Contract Theory • The social contract theory argues that the state arose out of a voluntary act of free people.

  7. Purpose of Government • Form a More Perfect Union • Establish Justice • Insure Domestic Tranquility • Provide for the Common Defense • Promote the General Welfare • Secure the Blessings of Liberty As stated in the Preamble

  8. Classifying Governments • Who can participate • The geographic distribution of governmental power within the state • The relationship between the legislative and the executive branches of the government

  9. Who Can Participate Democracy • In a democracy, supreme political authority rests with the people. • A direct democracy exists where the will of the people is translated into law directly by the people themselves. • In an indirect democracy, a small group of persons, chosen by the people to act as their representatives, expresses the popular will.

  10. Who Can Participate Dictatorship • A dictatorship exists where those who rule cannot be held responsible to the will of the people. • An autocracyis a government in which a single person holds unlimited political power. • An oligarchy is a government in which the power to rule is held by a small, usually self-appointed elite.

  11. Geographic Distribution of Power • Unitary Government: All powers held by the government belong to a single, central agency. • Federal Government: Powers of government are divided between a central government and several local governments. • Confederate Government: An alliance of independent states. A central organization, the confederate government has the power to handle only those matters that the member states have assigned to it.

  12. Relationship Between Legislative and Executive Branches

  13. Basic Concepts of Democracy The American concept of democracy rests on these basic notions: • A recognition of the fundamental worth and dignity of every person • A respect for the equality of all persons • A faith in majority rule and an insistence upon minority rights • An acceptance of the necessity of compromise • An insistence upon the widest possible degree of individual freedom

  14. Democracy and the Free Enterprise System The free enterprise system is 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. Decisions in a free enterprise system are determined bythe law of supply and demand. An economy in which private enterprise exists in combination with a considerable amount of government regulation and promotion is called a mixed economy.

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