The Bill of Rights. Incorporation 14 th Amendment – Due Process clause; “No STATE shall deprive a person of life, liberty or property without due process.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CHAPTER 19: FIRST AMENDMENT FREEDOMS
Advertisements

Magruder’s American Government
The Courts & Civil Liberties & Civil Rights. Who’s protected And who are we protected against?
A.P. U.S. Government & Politics
Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4. The Bill of Rights– Then and Now Civil Liberties – Definition: The legal constitutional protections against.
First Amendment Freedoms Freedom of Religion –Two Clauses involved Establishment Clause – your belief –“wall of separation between church and state” –Not.
Civil Liberties Freedom versus Order. Civil Liberties definition Those personal freedoms that are protected for all individuals and that generally deal.
UNPACKING THE FIRST AMENDMENT Civics/Geography. STINGER  Which rights protected by the constitution are most important to you? Why?  Which rights are.
What’s the difference? (Protection from govt. versus protection of govt; Liberty versus equality) THREE THEMES a.) gradual nationalization b.) Federal.
Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., Publishing as Longman Longman PoliticalScienceInteractive Magleby & Light Government by the People Chapter 15 First.
Freedom of Speech and the Press The 1 st Amendment.
First Amendment Rights to Free Speech and Press.  Democracy depends on a free exchange of ideas.  Volatile area of constitutional interpretation.
Unit 1: Constitutional Interpretation and the Bill of Rights.
Timeline of Key First Amendment- Related Events. 2 The First Amendment Part of the United States Bill of Rights, which was ratified in 1791 Establishes.
CIVIL LIBERTIES AND CIVIL RIGHTS NEED TO KNOW: Unit 6.
Civil Liberties and Public Policy. The Bill of Rights– Then and Now Civil Liberties – Definition: The legal constitutional protections against the government.
Civil Liberties and Public Policy
Chapter 4: Civil Liberties By Monica Cristian Timothy.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4 Edwards, Wattenberg, and Lineberry Government.
Civil Liberties. In the Bill of Rights, find the following: The right to join the communist party The right to make fun of the president The right to.
Freedom of Speech. What is Free Speech? Incorporation Gitlow v. N.Y. (1925): 14 th Amendment’s “due process clause” protects citizens’ fundamental rights.
Civil Liberties and Civil Rights Evolution and Public Policy.
Chapter 19: Civil Liberties: First Amendment Freedoms Section 3
AP Government: Chapter 4 Civil Liberties and Public Policy.
Chapter 4 Civil Liberties.  Pages Thursday’s Reading.
CHAPTER 4: THE BILL OF RIGHTS Integrated Government.
Civil Liberties Limits on the Government This presentation is the property of Dr. Kevin Parsneau for use by him and his current students. No other person.
B C D E A B C D E F G H I J A B C D E F G H I J A 1 pt 2 pts 3 pts.
History and Philosophy
American Government Chapter 19 Section 3. Freedom of Speech 1 st and 14 th Amendments Guarantees spoken and written word liberty Ensures open discussion.
Freedom of Expression Chapter 5, Theme B. Why is the 14 th Amendment important to the Freedom of Expression? Starting in 1925 (Gitlow v. NY), the SCOTUS.
Civil Liberties 1st amendment freedoms of religion freedoms of speech.
Civil Liberties C.M. Stickney ©2010. Establishment / Free Exercise Clauses of the 1 st Amendment “Congress Shall make no laws respecting an establishment.
Civil Liberties Chapter 4. Civil Liberties - Those specific individual rights that cannot be taken away by government and are guaranteed by the Constitution.
AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS – Civil Liberties
What are civil liberties?
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4  1 st Amendment Edwards, Wattenberg, and Lineberry.
Chapter 4 Civil Liberties. Civil Liberties versus Civil Rights civil liberties involve restraining the government’s action against individuals civil rights.
Selective Incorporation & the Bill of Rights. “Congress shall make no law…” Founding Fathers fear strong national government, NOT state government. Many.
Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4. The Bill of Rights– Then and Now Civil Liberties – Definition: The legal constitutional protections against.
Civil Liberties Unit 7: The Judicial Branch, Civil Liberties, and Civil Rights.
Freedom of Expression Free Speech Free Press Assembly and Petition.
FREEDOM OF THE PRESS. Prior Restraint Prior restraint: censorship of information before it is published is FORBIDDEN in the U.S. Near v. Minnesota (1931):
 CIVIL RIGHTS  “Fair and Equal” status and treatment from the government  Right to participate in the government  Basic right to be free from unequal.
Civil Liberties & Public Policy Chapter 4. Free Exercise Clause & Freedom of Expression Civil liberties are essential to a democracy. Civil liberties.
Agenda- 1/15 1.Warmup: Flag Murals Article (LS) 2.Lecture: Ch. 19 (RS) 3.Project Time 4.HW:-Work on project.
The Federal Court System, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties.
Civil Liberties Chapter 15. Protections Under the Bill of Rights Tinker v. Des Moines (1969)Tinker v. Des Moines Morse v. Frederick (2007)Morse v. Frederick.
Government Chapter 13 Civil Liberties We skipped 12, deal with it. Not 58 terms.
Negative v. Positive Rights Define: Founders History: 20 th century expansion.
What type of Speech is protected and what kind is not protected?
Freedom of Religion Exercise v. Establishment Cases – Lemon v. Kurtzman State $ Lemon Test – Engel v. Vitale Voluntary, Non-denominational – Wallace v.
Constitutional Rights
Civil Liberties and Public Policy—Unit 7--Chap 4
Limits on the Government
Limits on the Government
Day 3 Bill of Rights.
Unit 2 Civil Liberties & Civil Rights
Civil Liberties and Public Policy
Incorporation of the First Amendment
The First Amendment.
Civil Rights & Liberties
Civil Liberties.
American Civil Liberties and Civil Rights
Nationalization of Power & Civil Liberties
Unit 2 Civil Rights and Civil Liberties.
Agenda- 1/22 GRAB A CHROMEBOOK AND THE WORKSHEET!!
Longman PoliticalScienceInteractive
Civil Liberties Sticking it to the Man.
Civil Liberties.
Presentation transcript:

The Bill of Rights

Incorporation 14 th Amendment – Due Process clause; “No STATE shall deprive a person of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” 14 th Amendment – Due Process clause; “No STATE shall deprive a person of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” Incorporated rights: speech, press, religion, assembly, petition, most rights of accused. Incorporated rights: speech, press, religion, assembly, petition, most rights of accused. Not incorporated: bear arms, quartering troops, grand jury, trial by jury in civil cases Not incorporated: bear arms, quartering troops, grand jury, trial by jury in civil cases

Free Speech/Expression

Types of Speech Spoken Spoken Symbolic Symbolic Commercial Commercial Obscenity Obscenity

Standards Clear and present danger Clear and present danger Fighting words Fighting words Slander Slander

Cases Schenck vs. U.S. (1919) Schenck vs. U.S. (1919) Dennis vs. U.S. (1951) Dennis vs. U.S. (1951) Yates vs. U.S. (1957) Yates vs. U.S. (1957) Roth v. US (1957) Roth v. US (1957) Brandenburg v. Ohio (1959) Brandenburg v. Ohio (1959) Tinker vs. Des Moines (1969) Tinker vs. Des Moines (1969) Texas v. Johnson (1989) Texas v. Johnson (1989)

Freedom of the Press

Issues Free press & democracy Free press & democracy Prior restraint Prior restraint Shield laws Shield laws Fair Trials Fair Trials Privacy Privacy Sources Sources Pornography Pornography Libel Libel Elections Elections Cable v. network TV Cable v. network TV Advertising Advertising

Cases Near v. Minnesota (1931) Near v. Minnesota (1931) Zurcher v. Stanford Daily (1978) Zurcher v. Stanford Daily (1978) Miller v. California (1973) Miller v. California (1973) NY Times v. Sullivan (1964) NY Times v. Sullivan (1964) NY Times v. US (1971) NY Times v. US (1971) Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier (1988) Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier (1988) Falwell v. Hustler magazine (1988) Falwell v. Hustler magazine (1988) Miami Herald v. Tornillo (1974) Miami Herald v. Tornillo (1974) Red Lion Broadcasting v. FCC (1969) Red Lion Broadcasting v. FCC (1969) US v. Playboy Entertainment (2000) US v. Playboy Entertainment (2000) Reno v. ACLU (2000) Reno v. ACLU (2000)

Freedom of Assembly

Issues Peaceable Peaceable Restrictions Restrictions Time Time Place Place Manner Manner Public vs. private Public vs. private Right to associate Right to associate

Cases De Jonge vs. Oregon (1937) De Jonge vs. Oregon (1937) NAACP v. Alabama (1958) NAACP v. Alabama (1958) Collins v. Smith (Skokie case) (1978) Collins v. Smith (Skokie case) (1978) Chicago v. Morales (1990) Chicago v. Morales (1990) Boys Scouts v. Dale (2000) Boys Scouts v. Dale (2000)