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Lawmaking Chapter 2. Bell-Ringer 11/12 ► Copy and explain this quote. ► “Even when laws have been written down, they ought not always remain unaltered.”

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Presentation on theme: "Lawmaking Chapter 2. Bell-Ringer 11/12 ► Copy and explain this quote. ► “Even when laws have been written down, they ought not always remain unaltered.”"— Presentation transcript:

1 Lawmaking Chapter 2

2 Bell-Ringer 11/12 ► Copy and explain this quote. ► “Even when laws have been written down, they ought not always remain unaltered.”  Aristotle

3 What are some laws that have been challenged or changed over time? ► What changes do you see happening currently? ► Who makes these changes? ► What roles to citizens play in making sure our laws reflect our values?

4 Objectives: ► Roles of federal, state, and local lawmaking. ► Laws made at different levels. ► Define: ordinance, statute, bill, legislative intent. ► Purpose of Supremacy Clause ► Identify rules that judges use to determine intent. ► Interpret the intent of a law ► Five guidelines for drafting laws.

5 Role-play ► A proposal has been made to change the way that the Local School Council is chosen. ► “All students over the age of 14 should be able to vote for members of the school board.”

6 “All students over the age of 14 should be able to vote for all members of the Local School Council (LSC).” ► Perspectives  Students  Principal  Teachers  Parents  Community

7 Bell-Ringer 11/14 ► “All students over the age of 14 should be able to vote for all members of the Local School Council (LSC).” ► How might the principal of the school react to this proposal?

8 Lawmaking pages 19-24 ► Where do laws come from? ► Laws come from many places  Legislators  Voters  Administrative agencies  Courts ► Legislatures  Power divided ► Federal vs. state  laws for all or some  Congress ► 2 houses ► Senate 100 members ► House of Reps. 435 mbrs.

9 Lawmaking pages 19-24 ► Questions ► Notes

10 Lawmaking pages 19-24 ► Questions ► Notes

11 Homework 11/12 ► The Unclear Law – Problem 2.2 (Handout) In small group, discuss whether each vehicle should be allowed in the park. (10 minutes)

12 Review Quiz ► What do legislatures do? ► Make laws  U.S. Congress  Illinois General Assembly  Chicago City Council  Bicameral – two houses  Unicameral – one house

13 Legislative Powers ► FederalSharedStates

14 Problem 2.1 ► Parking laws ► School Law ► Bank Robbery ► Vendor’s permit ► Discrimination in workplace ► Interstate Travel ► Immigration?

15 Bell-Ringer 11/17 Copy and fill in the blanks. ► Laws are the _______and regulations made and enforced by __________ that regulate the ___________ of__________ in a society.

16 ► The Unclear Law – Problem 2.2 (Handout) In small group, discuss whether each vehicle should be allowed in the park. (10 minutes)

17 Rewrite the Law ► Homework: ► After your discussion, rewrite the regulation in problem 2.2 to better address the “intent” of the law.

18 Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 A No, not safe, not for time savings No, speeding, dangerous No, not necessary B Yes, clean park Yes, public service/job No, too loud Yes, clean place, air C No, speeding is dangerous Yes, catch criminal /sirens No, dangerous D No, might make more injury Yes, save lives Yes, save lives/sirens Yes, life and death E Yes, stroller not a vehicle Yes, not dangerous Yes, not disruptive, not a vehicle Yes, no pollution. F Yes, not disruptive Yes, harmless Yes, harmless. No, dangerous. Tyler stinks. G Yes, wheelchair is necessary Yes, needs it. Yes, no harm Yes, discrimination

19 ► Legislative intent  What is the purpose of a law? ► What do you want to happen? ► The Unclear Law  Intent ► Safety of people ► Preserve the environment

20 Problem 2.3: Drafting a Law ► A. Problem? ► B. Legislative Intent ► C. Details to be addressed ► D. Draft Proposal ► E. Guidelines (Check?) ► Guidelines?  Clear Language  Understandable  Effective date  Contradictions  Enforceable  Penalties

21 Period 8 Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 A No, not safe No, pollution No exceptions No, not an emergency No, not necessary route B No, dirty, pollute environment No, too big, dangerous No, should find another way Yes, needed to keep things clean C No, cause accident No, safety Yes, dangerous criminal No, danger to citizens D No, cause accident No, safety Yes, save a life Yes, save a life. Emergency E Yes, not a vehicle. Yes, not dangerous, only a baby Yes, no harm. Yes, safe. F No, dangerous to children No, kids might hurt themselves No, damage the grass G

22 Tuesday Bell-Ringer 11/18 ► What was the legislative intent of putting up this sign in the park? No Vehicles in the Park

23 Agencies ► Administrative agencies authorized by legislative action. ► Agencies develop rules and regulations  Make laws more specific ► Example: OHSA Occupational Safety Health Administration  Congress empowered to improve working conditions  Handicap ramps, guardrails, cleanliness, air quality

24 Agencies ► EPA – Environmental Protection Agency  Enforce environmental laws ► Department of Homeland Security  Formed after September 11, 2001  Protect, defend against terrorism ► TSA – Transportation Security Admin.  Protect roads, airports, trains  Part of the Department of Transportation

25 Local Agencies ► Most affect on you…  Building codes  Business licenses  Local School Council ► Agencies are “hidden” lawmakers.  Hold Public Hearings to inform and gauge opinions  Congress – “Printed in Federal Register”

26 Wednesday - Bell-Ringer 11/19 ► No man's life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session. – ► Mark Twain (1866) Mark Twain Mark Twain ► Explain Twain’s quote.

27 Bell-Ringer 11/20 Why do you think former President Ronald Reagan would have said this? “Government is not a solution to our problems, government is the problem."

28 Courts ► Trials  Defendant can appeal  Appeals/Appellate Court  Precedent ► A written opinion ► Establishes a traditional interpretation of law.

29 Legal Precedent ► Case: Brown vs. Board of Education ► Brown's daughter Linda, a third grader, had to walk six blocks to her school bus stop to ride to Monroe Elementary, her segregated black school one mile away, while Sumner Elementary, a white school, was only seven blocks from her house. Monroe Elementary Monroe Elementary ► Ruling by the court…  “Education…is a right which must be made available to all on equal terms.”

30 International Lawmaking ► Applies to conduct of countries  Treaties – a contract among countries ► Regulate International  Trade  Refugees  Borders  Ownership rights  Copyrights and patents  United Nations 1945 ► New York – 200 countries meet ► U.N. Charter, World Trade Organization, UNESCO ► Heavily funded by U.S. / Not always followed by U.S. ► World Court  European Union (EU) 2003 ► Countries of Europe Unite ► Laws, currency, parliament

31 Assignment 11/20 ► Problem 2.5: United Nations Action ► Binder Check – Monday ► Test on Monday


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