SOLUTION MANUAL
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American Government: Political
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Development and Institutional Change
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12thEditionbyCalJillson,AllChapters1-16
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1. Chapter 1 The Origins of American Political Principles
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2. Chapter 2 The Revolution and the Constitution
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3. Chapter 3 Federalism and American Political Development
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4. Chapter 4 Political Socialization and Public Opinion
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5. Chapter 5 The Mass Media and the Political Agenda
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6. Chapter 6 Interest Groups: The Politics of Influence
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7. Chapter 7 Political Parties: Winning the Right to Govern
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8. Chapter 8 Voting, Campaigns, and Elections
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9. Chapter 9 Congress: Partisanship, Polarization, and Gridlock
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10. Chapter 10 The President: Executive Power in a Separation of Powers Regime
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11. Chapter 11 Bureaucracy: Redesigning Government for the Twenty-First Century
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12. Chapter 12 The Federal Courts: Activism versus Restraint
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13. Chapter 13 Civil Liberties: Ordered Liberty in America
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14. Chapter 14 Civil Rights: Where Liberty and Equality Collide
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15. Chapter 15 Government, The Economy, and Domestic Policy
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16. Chapter 16 America’s Global Role in the Twenty-First Century
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Chapter 1 d
THE ORIGINS OF AMERICAN POLITICALPRINCIPLES
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FOCUSQUESTIONS
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Q1 What are the broad purposes of government?
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A1 The ancients believed the role of government and politics was to foster human
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dexcellence. However, it is imperative to remember that the Greeks and Romans
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dbelieved the virtuous should rule according to natural law. Furthermore, valuesof
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dequality and order would be served through a society based upon the rule oflaw to
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dprovide for the common good. In the Middle Ages, government was largely used to
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facilitate religion and maintained the need for the individual to live a proper life in
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the service of God. The role of government changed in the early sixteenth century
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by downplaying the role of religion while alternatively promoting the role of
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limited government to protect private property and individual rights.
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Q2 How should government be designed to achieve its purposes?
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A2 According to Plato the philosopher-king’s wisdom and intellect would promote order,
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stability and justice. Yet, Aristotle takes a more realistic view of Athenian society by
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advocating the best form of government as a polity, which combined oligarchic and
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democratic elements to produce political stability. The Romans combined
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monarchical, aristocratic, and democratic principles as a mixed government within
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representative bodies like the Senate and the Assembly in order to champion the
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causes of both the rich and the poor. Government in theMiddle Ages was determined
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through divine right, whereby a monarch or Pope was ordained by God to rule.
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Hence, wisdom and virtue rested within these few individuals who governed to
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promote religious life and protect the religious establishment. The Renaissance,
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Protestant Reformation, and Enlightenment Periods shifted the role of government
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from upholding religious doctrine to secular concerns, such as protecting inalienable
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rights, including private property, and promoting commerce. In turn, Enlightenment
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political
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philosophers largely appealed to individualism and not religious hierarchy as ameansd d d d d d d d d d
dto provide order and stability in which individuals could flourish.
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Q3 What lessons about government did colonial Americans draw from the history ofancient
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Greece and Rome?
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A3 Plato was suspicious of democracy’s rule of the many because good government
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dwould decay into mob rule. Hence, the passions of the masses needed to be quelled
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dby more aristocratic elements. With this problem in mind, the Framers ofthe U.S.
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dConstitution referenced the institutional design of the Roman republic adhered to the
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tradition of mixed government initially expounded by Aristotle and the Romans. This
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was maintained in the indirect selection of both the Senateand the presidency within
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the Constitution. Aristotle also advocated mixing aristocratic and democratic
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d elements in a governing structure called a polity. In effect, this governmental design
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dallowed the few and the many to participate in the politics providing an orderly
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dsociety where the poor should be able to select government officials who were held
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daccountable. This was also made manifest inthe Constitution with its aristocratic-like d d d d d d d d d d
dSenate and the more democratic House of Representatives. Thus the American
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drepublic’s Constitution established institutional powers to govern according to the
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drule of law. While the Framers rejected the religious hierarchy of the Middle Ages,
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dthey appealed to inalienable rights endowed upon every individual by God, per the
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dwritings of John Locke, in which a just government and society could not be impeded.
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Q4 What circumstances led Europeans to leave their homelands to settle in America?
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A4 Individuals immigrated to the colonies to escape religious persecution and civil unrest
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after the English Civil War and to pursue social and economic opportunities. Colonists
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enjoyed a vast array of natural resources and a large geographical area where
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freedom of religion and economic opportunity flourished. Also, their heterogeneous
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social composition as well as continual promotion of ideals, such as equality and
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tolerance, tended to promote political freedom at the same time that social
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expansion of the population was occurring.
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Q5 What did democracy mean to our colonial ancestors, and did they approve it?
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A5 The colonists were skeptical of democracy and viewed this type of governing
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dauthority as mob rule. Society was largely seen as segmented into those who should
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drule and those who should not. In fact, the Founders believed that the elite (well-
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deducated, land owners) should occupy positions of leadership. Thus, an aristocratic
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delement within government was necessary to protect against thethreat of mob rule
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dhistorically associated with democracy. Fundamentally, the idea of republicanism
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dwas promoted as an ideal at a higher level than democracy. This was made most
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dmanifest in the tendency to prefer mixed d d d d d d
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