Title: American Government and Politics Today
1American Government and Politics Today
- Chapter 4
- Civil Liberties
Please note that these slides are meant as a
review after a careful reading of the chapter.
These will NOT substitute for reading the
chapter.The publishers original slide is in
black. My annotations are in red.
2The Bill of RightsRemember the Bill of Rights
is really a Bill of Limits.
- Origins colonists fear of a tyrannical
government. - Federalists agreed to amend the Constitution to
include a Bill of Rights after ratification,
placing limitations on the government, and thus
protecting citizens civil liberties.
3The Bill of Rights and State GovernmentsKnow
the concept of incorporation (XIVth Amendment).
- While the Bill of Rights protected the people
from the national government it did not protect
the people from state governments. - In 1868 the Fourteenth Amendment became a part of
the Constitution, imposing step-by-step, most of
the Constitutional protections of civil liberties
upon state governments.
4Table 4-1Incorporating the Bill of Rights into
the Fourteenth Amendment
1966 Right not to self-incriminate
V
Miranda v. Arizona
5Freedom of Religion
- Separation of Church and State
- Establishment Clause
- 1. Aid to Church-related schools
- 2. School Vouchers
- 3. School PrayerEngel v. Vitale
- 4. Prayer outside the Classroom
- 5. The Ten Commandments
- 6. Teaching Evolution
- 7. Religious Speech
6Free Exercise Clause
- Guarantees the free exercise of religion
restrained when religious practices interfere
with public policy. - Examples the ability of school districts to
select texts for students, and the requirement of
vaccinations for school enrollment. - The Religious Freedom Restoration Act
- Free Exercise in the Public Schools.
How does the establishment clause compete with
the free-exercise clause (e.g. polygamy, etc.)?
7Freedom of Expression
- No Prior Restraint
- Protection of Symbolic Speech
- Protection of Commercial Speech
- Permitted Restrictions on Expression
- Clear and Present Danger
- Modifications Grave and Probable Danger Rule
- Unprotected Speech
- Obscenity
- Pornography/Internet Pornography
- Slander
- Campus Speech
- Hate Speech
8Freedom of the Press
- Libel, a written defamation of character
- Public figures must meet higher standards than
ordinary people to win a libel suit. - A Free Press versus a Fair Trial
- Gag orders the right of a defendant to a fair
trial supersedes the right of the public to
attend the trial. - Films, Radio, and TV
- Freedom of the press is no longer limited to just
the print media though broadcast media do not
receive the same protection as print media.
9The Right to Assemble and Petition the
GovernorNo questions on this.
- The Supreme Court has held that state and local
governments cannot bar individuals from
assembling. State and local governments can
require permits for such assembly so that order
can be maintained. However the government cannot
be selective as to who receives the permit. - Street Gangs.
- Online Assembly
10Privacy Rights
- There is no explicit Constitutional right to
privacy, but rather the right to privacy is an
interpretation by the Supreme Court. - From the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth
Amendments. - The right was established in 1965 in Griswold v.
Connecticut.
11Privacy Rights and Abortion
- Roe v. Wade. In Roe v. Wade (1973) the court held
that governments could not totally prohibit
abortions because this violates a womans right
to privacy. Government action was limited
depending on the stage of the pregnancy. - Current Issue partial birth abortion
12Privacy Rights and The Right to DieNope.
- Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health
(1997) a patients life support could be
withdrawn at the request of a family member if
there was clear and convincing evidence that
the patient did not want the treatment. This has
led to the popularity of living wills. - What If There Is No Living Will? For married
persons, the spouse is the relative with
authority in this matter. - Physician-Assisted Suicide. The Constitution does
not include a right to commit suicide. This
decision left states much leeway to legislate on
this issue. Since that decision in 1997, only the
state of Oregon has legalized physician-assisted
suicide.
13Privacy Rights vs. Security Issues
- Privacy rights have taken on particular events
since September 11, 2001. For example,
legislation has been proposed that would allow
for roving wiretaps, which would allow a person
(and his or her communications) to be searched,
rather than merely a place. Such rules may
violate the Fourth Amendment.
14Rights of the Accused
- Fourth Amendment
- No unreasonable or unwarranted search or seizure.
Mapp v. Ohio - No arrest except on probable cause.
- Fifth Amendment
- No coerced confessions. Miranda
- No compulsory self-incrimination.
- No double jeopardy.
- Sixth Amendment
- Legal counsel. Gideon v. Wainwright
15Rights of the Accused (cont.)
- Informed of charges.
- Speedy and public jury trial.
- Impartial jury by ones peers.
- Eighth Amendment questions about lethal
injection - Reasonable bail.
- No cruel or unusual punishment.
16The Bill of Rights and the Accused
- Miranda v. Arizona requires the police to inform
suspects of their rights (Miranda v. Arizona
1966). - Exceptions to the Miranda Rule. These include a
public safety exception, a rule that illegal
confessions need not bar a conviction if other
evidence is strong, and that suspects must claim
their rights unequivocally. - Video Recording of Interrogations. In t he
future, such a procedure might satisfy Fifth
Amendment requirements. - The Exclusionary Rule. This prohibits the
admission of illegally seized evidence (Mapp v.
Ohio 1961)
17The Death PenaltyNope.
- Cruel and Unusual Punishment?
- The Death Penalty Today. Now 37 states allow the
death penalty. - Time Limits for Death Row Appeals.
- The 1996 Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death
Penalty act limits appeals from death row. - Recently, DNA testing has led to the freeing of
about a hundred death row inmates who were
wrongly convicted, throwing doubt on the death
penalty.
18Figure 4-1 States that Allow the Death Penalty