Foreign policy & national defense

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
American Government Chapter 17
Advertisements

Chapter 17 Foreign Policy and National Defense
Foreign Policy. After World War II America went from isolationism to internationali sm.
Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy
Chapter 16 & 17 Highlights. Chapter 16 Financing Govt  Power to Tax - Article I  Income Tax – Progressive Tax, the more you make the greater % they.
Foreign Policy.
The Executive Branch From Washington to Obama and beyond….
Chapter 22: The Development of U.S. Foreign Policy Flags from:
Today Finish Bin Laden Video
Foreign Policy Linnea Bassin ED 639 Dr. Helms. Unit Foreign Policy and National Defense Senior Government Chapter 17 Section 1.
Chapter 17: Foreign Policy and National Defense
123 Go To Section: 4 Foreign Policy. 123 Go To Section: 4 Chapter 17, Section 1 Foreign Policy and Foreign Affairs What is foreign policy? What is the.
Chapter 17 Foreign Policy and National Defense.
Foreign Policy and National Defense Chapter 17 Notes
1 CHAPTER 3 National Defense CHAPTER 3 National Defense 1.
Foreign Policy and National Defense Chapter 17. NATIONAL SECURITY Section 2.
Chapter The United States + The World. Goals of Foreign Policy.
Three features distinguish bureaucracies: Ch. 15 The Bureaucracy Hierarchical authority. Job specialization for each bureaucrat Formalized rules.
FOREIGN AFFAIRS. ISOLATIONISM TO INTERNATIONALISM 1. Domestic Affairs: what’s happening within our country 2. Foreign Affairs: nation’s relations with.
Executive Departments Executive Agencies Cabinet Pres.
Chapter 6 Section 1 page 160. Qualifications for President 1. native born citizen 2. at least 35 years old 3. have been a resident of the U.S. for at.
US Foreign Policy- Historical Context - Framers sought to remove the US from international affairs and the wars that had plagued Europe/ The Constitutional.
Foreign Policy and National Defense Chapter 17
FOREIGN AFFAIRS. Isolationism to Internationalism For more than 150 years, the American people were chiefly interested in domestic affairs, or what was.
Political Science American Government and Politics Chapter 15 Foreign and Defense Policy.
Chapter 17: Foreign Policy and National Defense Section 1.
FOREIGN POLICY HOW THE U.S. DEALS WITH OTHER COUNTRIES.
C4.1(3) The Constitution and Foreign Policy The Senate Advise Consent Approve.
Chapter 17. For over 150 years, Americans were more interested in domestic affairs-what is happening in this country- than in foreign affairs—events.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Foreign Policy and National Defense.
Copyright, 2000 © Prentice Hall Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 17 Foreign Policy and National Defense.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 17 Foreign Policy and National Defense.
Chapter 17: Foreign Policy and National Defense Section 2.
Chapter 17: Foreign Policy and National Defense Section 1.
Objective 4.7 The Cabinet. Objective 4.7 how do cabinet departments and federal agencies, help to carry out the laws?
Chapter 17 Foreign Policy And National Defense. Section 1 Foreign Affairs and National Security Isolationism to Internationalism – Domestic affairs- events.
FOREIGN POLICY AND NATIONAL DEFENSE OF THE UNITED STATES Patriot High School, 2013.
Executive Branch The Presidency.
How is U.S. Foreign Policy Created?. What does it involve? Military, diplomacy, economic policy and intelligence gathering Constitutional Framework: President.
Chapter 17 Section 1& 2: Foreign Affairs and National Security By: Mr. Thomas Parsons.
FOREIGN POLICY AND NATIONAL DEFENSE OF THE UNITED STATES Patriot High School, 2013.
Federal Agencies. What Is a Bureaucracy? Hierarchical authority. Pyramid structure with a chain of command running from top to bottom. Job specialization.
Foreign Policy and National Defense
Foreign & Military Policy
Chapter 17: Foreign Policy and National Defense Section 1
Executive Departments and the Cabinet
“Domestic policy can only defeat us. Foreign policy can kill us.”
Who makes and carries out foreign policy?
“Foreign Affairs and Diplomacy” Page
Executive Departments and the Cabinet
U.S. FOREIGN POLICY.
Chapter 17: Foreign Policy and National Defense Section 1
Foreign Policy and National Defense
Executive Branch Article II Ch
Foreign Policy and National Defense
Chapter 17: Vocabulary and Notes
Foreign Policy and National Defense
The Executive Agencies
Executive Departments and the Cabinet
Chapter 17 Foreign Policy and National Defense
Foreign Policy and National Security
American Foreign Policy From Independence to Today
Foreign Policy and National Defense
Foreign Affairs and national security
Foreign Policy Basics. Foreign Policy Basics Development of US Foreign Policy.
The United States needs to take a “fire and fury” approach to North Korea since its’ testing of a hydrogen bomb this past Sunday.” Strongly Agree – Agree.
Chapter 17: Foreign Policy and National Defense Section 2
SWBAT describe how US foreign policy is created
Foreign Policy and National Defense Chapter 17 Notes
Executive Branch Article II Ch
Presentation transcript:

Foreign policy & national defense Unit 4

Foreign Affairs & national security

A. Isolationism to Internationalism Beginning of U.S. = isolationism After WWII = internationalism

b. foreign policy defined Foreign policy is made up of the stands and actions that a nation takes in every aspect of its relationships with other countries So, I typed “foreign policy definition” into Google Images to get a nice picture for this slide, and this came up. I don’t know WHY it came up, but it did.

C. The State Department Secretary of State Top member of the Cabinet Duties relate to foreign policy Foreign Service Right of legation = right to send and receive foreign diplomatic representatives

C. The State Department cont. Ambassadors Official rep. of the U.S. appointed by the Pres. to rep. the nation in matters of diplomacy Diplomatic Immunity Ambassadors cannot be arrested, sued, or taxed in another country

D. The Defense department

D. The Defense department cont. Secretary of Defense President’s chief aide and advisor in making and carrying out defense policy Operating head of the defense dept. Chief Military Aids 5 members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

E. The Military department Department of the Army Defeat any attack on the U.S. and protect foreign interests Department of the Navy Seize or defend bases Carry out naval-related land operations Department of the Air Force Attack and defeat enemies Provide transportation & combat support

F. Other Foreign & Defense agencies The CIA Department of Homeland Security NASA The Selective Service System

American foreign policy overview

Foreign policy overview George Washington & Isolationism (pg. 481-482) The Monroe Doctrine (pg. 482) Continental Expansion (pg. 482) A World Power (pg. 482-483) The Good Neighbor Policy (pg. 483) The Open Door Policy (pg. 483- 484) WWI and the Return to Isolationism (pg. 484) WWII (pg. 484) Collective Security (pg. 485) Deterrence (pg. 485) The Truman Doctrine (pg. 486) The Berlin Blockade (pg. 486) The Cuban Missile Crisis (pg. 486) The Korean War (pg. 487) The War in Vietnam (pg. 487- 488) Detente and the Return to Containment (pg. 488) The End of the Cold War (pg. 488-489) The World Remains Dangerous (pg. 489)

foreign policy Gallery walk Read the assigned section Make an illustration to represent your section, and write a 2-sentence summary at the bottom of the illustration When the gallery walk starts, leave your illustration & summary on the desk. You will fill in your graphic organizer by walking from illustration to illustration and writing a 1-sentence summary in the appropriate section