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Civics

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Civics Unit 1 The Beginnings of Democratic Decision Making Pannell Chapter Expectations You will learn: How societies throughout history have made decisions How ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Civics


1
Civics Unit 1
  • The Beginnings of Democratic Decision Making
  • Pannell

2
Chapter Expectations
  • You will learn
  • How societies throughout history have made
    decisions
  • How and where the idea of democratic
    decisions making started
  • How and where modern ideas about democratic
    decision making began to evolve
  • How people won the right to participate in the
    decision-making process

3
Key Terms
Authoritarianism Citizen Civic conflict Constitution Democracy monarchy Oligarchy Republic totalitarianism
4
Ways of making decisions
  • Authoritarian Way
  • Total obedience to the authority of a single
    person or small group
  • Individual freedom does not exist
  • Democratic Way
  • The people control the process of making the
    rules about how they are governed
  • Greek
  • demos people, kratia rule

5
Ways of making decisions cont.
Authoritarian Governments Democratic Governments
Leaders are usually self-appointed Leaders cannot usually be replaced Citizens cannot question or speak out against leaders actions Leaders are elected by citizens Leaders term in office is limited. Elections are held at regular intervals Citizens can question and speak out against leaders actions
6
Roots of Democratic Citizenship
  • We were originally nomadic tribes that collected
    into farms, villages, towns, cities and then
    civilizations
  • We did not need written rules since society was
    small, and individual customs were similar
  • Everyone understood the unwritten rules they
    lived by

7
Roots of Democratic Citizenship
  • When we collected in cities and then
    civilizations we shared our space with many
    others we did not know, with different customs
  • Merging differing customs led to civic conflict
    disagreements among people who live in the same
    community
  • Conflict arose over land and property, purchase
    and sale or goods and things that would disturb
    public peace

We created formal ways of preventing and
resolving these conflicts. These rules became
laws
8
Roots of Democratic Citizenship
  • Successful warring cities became vast empires
  • Rulers dominated the lives of thousands /
    millions of people
  • Monarchy When the ruler was selected through
    hereditary. When a ruler died their eldest
    (usually son) child inherited the throne
  • Monarchs stayed in power by persuading the people
    that their right to rule had been granted by
    their god(s)
  • Mesopotamia, Egypt, China, Mesoamerica

9
Ancient Governments Monarchy and Divine Right
  • China emperors right to rule was the mandate
    of Heaven. Heaven (Chief god) was the husband
    of Earth. Emperors were their sons
  • It was the emperors duty to carry out the will
    of Heaven, not the will of the people
  • This idea of government lasted thousands of years

Tai Tsung 626-649 CE
10
The Evolution of Democracy
  • Ancient Athens (Greece)
  • Originally governed by a single ruler
  • Between 700 and 350 BCE some Greeks gradually won
    the right to share in decision making
  • Polis public affairs of the city
  • Greek polis of Athens cradle of democracy.
    Where the idea of democracy took root
  • Citizens were expected to participate actively in
    the citys affairs

11
Statement of classic democratic valuse
  • Ancient Athens cont.
  • Funeral Oration
  • Our constitution is called a democracy because
    power is in the hands not of a minority but of
    the whole people. When it is a question of
    settling private disputes, everyone is equal
    before the law when it is a question of putting
    one person before another in positions of public
    responsibility what counts is not membership of
    a particular class, but the actual ability which
    the man possesses. No one, so long as he has it
    in him to be of service to the state, is kept in
    political obscurity because of poverty..
  • (In Athens) each individual is interest
    not only in his own affairs but in the affairs as
    the state as well

Pericles - Athenian, lived about 495-429 BCE
12
Athenian Democracy
  • Direct democracy Every citizen had the right to
    vote on decisions affecting the way the city was
    governed
  • Only citizens could participate in the citys
    public affairs Free adult men born in Athens
  • Slaves, women, children and those born outside
    Athens's city were protected by Athenian laws yet
    had no political rights
  • Therefore most people who lived in Athens had
    no political rights Athenian democracy, a nice
    ideal!

13
Ancient Rome
  • Originally ruled by kings
  • 509 BC, the king was driven out and Rome became a
    republic. Rather than being ruled by a
    hereditary monarchy, people from rich families
    took over governing. They were called patricians
  • Plebs (plebeian) made up everybody else.
    Although making up a majority, they had no say in
    government

14
Ancient Rome
  • 494 BCE, demanding a right to participate in law
    making, the Plebs staged a general strike, vowing
    to form a new city
  • Plebs strategy worked. They won the right to
    form an assembly that would have some say in law
    making
  • However the real power belonged to a separate
    assembly the Senate

15
Collapse of Rome Descent into the Dark Ages
  • Roman citizenship still limited to only men
    living in Rome all slaves, women, country folk
    are not citizens
  • Roman democracy would go full circle
  • Roman Empire collapse by 410 CE
  • Western Europe descends into the Dark Ages
  • Idea of democracy virtually snuffed out

Authoritarianism (dictator)
Democracy of sorts
16
Dark and Middle Ages 500-1215 CE
  • Europe developed into small medieval city states
    usually had Oligarchy rule
  • Eventually city states were absorbed into larger
    nations ruled by monarchies (England, Scotland,
    France, Spain)
  • Ideas of democracy never truly died. There were
    always ideas, talk of democracy and actions taken
    to try to win citizen rights

17
Magna Carta 1215 CE
  • Britain absolute Monarchy divine right
  • 1215 group of nobles forced King John
    (tyrannical reigning monarch) to sign a document
    that put limits on his power
  • Document Magna Carta or Great Charter
  • Put the law of the land above anything else

18
Magna Carta 1215 CE
  • Examples
  • no free man could be imprisoned except by the
    lawful judgment of his peers and by the law of
    the land
  • No Forcing widows to remarry
  • No forcing villagers to build bridges over rivers
  • No forcing knights to pay money to excuse
    themselves from guarding castles
  • No confiscating the horses or carts of freemen
  • No helping themselves to firewood that did not
    belong to them

19
Early Parliaments
  • Established shortly after the signing of the
    Magna Carta
  • Gatherings of representatives of the people that
    discussed matters including law making and taxes
  • British parliament split in two
  • House of Lords (those with inherited titles
    lord, duke, earl)
  • House of Commons (commoners with no titles)
  • Note members of the H of C were not elected like
    today, but chosen by a small wealth elite

20
Thomas Hobbs 1588-1679
  • Hobbs believed that .life without government was
    solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short
    because human beings were egotistical and
    selfish.
  • In order to avoid anarchy , the people had to
    surrender freedom for order
  • People gave up doing whatever they wanted to a
    ruler in return for order and stability

21
John Locke 1632-1704
  • Rejected Hobbes dark vision of human nature
  • Father of Liberalism
  • liberalism puts the individual ahead of
    government.
  • Humans were rational, not aggressive and shared
    natural rights
  • 1. life
  • 2. liberty
  • 3. protection of property

22
John Locke continued
  • Believed that a contract existed between citizens
    and their rulers
  • The people agreed to support and assist the
    government and , in turn, the government agreed
    to protect and defend their natural rights
  • Should a government fail to do this, the citizens
    had the right (duty) to overthrow that government
  • Lockes ideas gave way to the age of revolutions

23
American Revolution 1776
  • United States declaration of independence (from
    Britain) is based in Lockes ideas
  • Thomas Jefferson believed that government was the
    instrument of the people and created a government
    to ensure the American people their right to
    life, liberty and, in stead of protection of
    property pursuit of happiness
  • Job of government is to protect and defend its
    citizens rights

24
French Revolution 1789-1799
  • Slogan Liberty, Fraternity, Equality
  • Upset about an unfair taxation system
  • French monarchs Louis XVI and his queen Marie
    Antoinette were executed all nobility fled into
    exile
  • Established new republic based on Lockes ideas

25
Industrial Revolution 1850
  • Mass movement of people from the country to the
    cities to work in factories
  • Gave way to an entirely new class system.
    Instead of nobility and commoners we now have a
    new class system
  • nobility
  • rich (factory owners),.
  • Poor (workers)
  • This new rich class (factory workers) want access
    to power in decision making government
  • Also gave way to Marxism

26
Communist (Russian) Revolution 1917
  • Russia monarchy under Czar Nicholas
  • World War 1
  • Vladimir Lenin and his communist party overthrow
    the monarchy. Monarchy executed by firing squad
  • Attempt to create a utopian society by
    implementing the ideas of Karl Marx.
  • No private ownership
  • Everyone was supposed to be equal
  • Slogan From each according to his abilities to
    each according to his needs.

27
The Great Depression 1930s
  • Prior to depression governments had a limited
    involvement in economics laissez faire
  • Depression led to the social welfare state now
    governments have an obligation to provide for all
    citizens
  • Unemployment insurance

28
Civil Rights movement 1960
  • Rights that were granted to only white citizens
    would be fought for and earned by African
    Americans
  • Sit-ins and demonstrations
  • Martin Luther King
  • Nelson Mandela
  • Desmond Tutu

29
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