2025-01-15
- Course Overview
- What is Government? What is politics?
- Walkthrough of Canvas Modules and e-book
- Questions
Monday, January 20: Martin Luther King, Jr. Day - No Class
Wednesday, January 22
- Reading/Chapter Assignment: Chapter 1: Political Thinking and Political Culture: Becoming a Responsible Citizen should be 50% complete before class
- Philosophies and Ideologies in American Government
- Questions
January 27
- Chapter 2: Constitutional Democracy: Promoting Liberty and Self-Government should be 50% complete before class
- Constitutional Principles: Checks and Balances, Separation of Powers
January 29
- Chapter 3: Federalism: Forging a Nation should be 50% complete before class
- Finish Constitution: Federalism
Constitutional principles and their background (Module 1, due February 10. Exam 1, February 10 in class.)
- What is government? What is politics? Early American political thought
- Separation of powers
- Civil liberties
- Federalism
- The Constitutional delegation of powers to the three branches of government
- The role of the states in the federal system
The branches of the federal government
- The legislative branch (Module 2 Due and Exam 2 in class, March 3)
- The executive branch, the bureaucracy, and implementing policy (Module 3 Due, April 7 and Exam 3 in class April 9)
- The judicial branch (Module 4, due April 28, and Online Module 4 Quiz, April 28)
- Final Exam: May 5
Before stepping on the campus today, what was the last time that politics made a difference in your life?
Houston Public Works
Metro rail
HCC Central Campus
Why does politics have such power to cause harm?
To really understand government and politics we first need to know what those things are.
What is government or “The State”?
What makes government or The State different from other organizations?
What is politics?
We can compare the government or the state to other organizations and see what is different about it.
Family
- What does it have in common?
- What is different?
Family
Church
- What does it (government) have in common?
- What is different?
Family
Church
Community organizations (voluntary)
- What does it have in common?
- What is different?
Family
Church
Community organizations (voluntary)
Charities
- What does it have in common?
- What is different?
Family
Church
Community organizations (voluntary)
Charities
Businesses - The Market
- What does it have in common?
- What is different?
Organized crime
- What does it have in common?
- What is different?
Organized crime
vigilantes
- What does it have in common?
- What is different?
Organized crime
vigilantes
terrorists
- What does it have in common?
- What is different?
The organized, coercive use of violent force commonly accepted as legitimate
What is politics?
What is politics?
Your thoughts?
The State or government.
These organizations all engage in collective action, but lack one thing the state has:
These organizations all engage in collective action, but lack one thing the state has:
Coercive use of violent force
Family, church, the market, etc. are all about making collective decisions in:
The Voluntary Sphere
Making collective decisions in:
The Coercive Sphere
George Washington
Frederick Douglass
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Author: Tom Hanna
Website: tomhanna.me
License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
HCC GOVT2305, Fall 2024, Instructor: Tom Hanna