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Foundations of Government. Types of Government  Monarchy  Oligarchy  Dictatorship  Totalitarian  Democracy  Anarchy.

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Presentation on theme: "Foundations of Government. Types of Government  Monarchy  Oligarchy  Dictatorship  Totalitarian  Democracy  Anarchy."— Presentation transcript:

1 Foundations of Government

2 Types of Government  Monarchy  Oligarchy  Dictatorship  Totalitarian  Democracy  Anarchy

3 Monarchies  A government with a hereditary ruler  A king or queen that inherits the position from their parents

4 Monarchies  Absolute Monarchy  Until about the 1600s, monarchs had unlimited authority to rule. This is an absolute monarchy  Constitutional Monarchy  In most countries with monarchs, the power of the hereditary ruler is limited by the country’s constitution and laws

5 Oligarchy  Power is given to a small group  Ordinary citizens have little say in what goes on with the government

6 Dictatorship  Dictators exercise complete control over the state  The usually take power by force  To stay in power, most dictators rely on intimidation and persecution via the police and military

7 Totalitarianism  Many dictators impose totalitarian rule over their people  In a totalitarian state government control extends to almost all aspects of people’s lives  They ban political opposition  Regulate what industries and farmers produce  They suppress individual freedom, dictating what people should believe They do this through media propaganda, scare tactics and violence

8 Democracy  Government in which the people rule  Democracy began in Athens  EVERY citizen of Athens was expected to participate in the cities government  This was a direct democracy

9 Democracy  Direct Democracy  All citizens have an equal voice  Meaning every single citizen participated in the debate and voted first hand  Representative Democracy  The citizens choose a smaller group to represent them, make laws, and govern on their behalf  However, the people remain the source of the government’s authority

10 Anarchy  No government at all  People are allowed to do whatever they want

11 Political Theorists

12 The Social Contract  Government is only legitimate if the people agree to be governed  “Contract” between the government and the people  Locke’s idea of The Social Contract was the inspiration for Thomas Jefferson’s words in the Declaration of Independence  By entering the social contract, you agree to give up unlimited freedom to ensure certain unalienable rights are guaranteed.

13 John Locke  First wrote against the divine right of kings  Which argued that kings were given their power by God  Second Treatise of Government (1689)  Had several thoughts on equality, human nature, and the role of the government

14 John Locke  Said that differences exist in people and these differences matter  Especially when it comes to who rules the country  Not everyone is equal  If all adults were equal, then all of them would be eligible to become president, regardless of their qualifications

15 Who is more qualified to rule?

16 John Locke  Tabula Rasa  People are born with a blank slate  People are inherently good.  They won’t always go out and try to conquer everything  People are only concerned with what we can actually protect and matters to use  Knowledge and morals comes from experience  Nature vs nurture?

17 Thomas Hobbes  Leviathan (1659)  Complete opposite of Locke  Locke believed that freedoms are protected by the law  While Hobbes believes that freedom is the absence of law  Does this mean Hobbes believes in anarchy?

18 Thomas Hobbes  He thought human nature was evil  He believed in total control, because without control, life would be “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short”  So what kind of government was Hobbes advocating?

19 Jean-Jacque Rousseau  “Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains.”  “The Sovereign, having no force other than the legislative power, acts only by means of the laws; and the laws being solely the authentic acts of the general will, the Sovereign cannot act save when the people is assembled.”  “Every law the people have not ratified in person is null and void — is, in fact, not a law.”  “The legislative power belongs to the people, and can belong to it alone”

20 Jean-Jacque Rousseau  Believed that any government in which you have to give up certain rights is not freedom at all, it is slavery.  Agreed with Locke that legitimate political power comes from the consent of the governed


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