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Civil Liberties and Public Policy

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Civil Liberties and Public Policy Introduction Politics and government matter. Americans are apathetic about politics and government. Political decisions impact your ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Civil Liberties and Public Policy


1
Civil Liberties and Public Policy
2
Introduction
  • Politics and government matter.
  • Americans are apathetic about politics and
    government.
  • Political decisions impact your daily life in
    some way, shape or form.

3
Introduction
  • The American Youth
  • Few keep up with politics.
  • Less likely to be informed.

4
Introduction
5
Government Politics
  • Government
  • The institutions and processes through which
    public policies are made for society.
  • Politics
  • How we elect our leaders and what our leaders do
    with government.

6
The Policymaking System
  • The process by which policy comes into being and
    evolves over time.
  • Policymaking begins and ends with the people!
  • Figure 1.4

7
Linkage Institutions
  • The institutions that LINK the American people
    it their government!
  • Political Parties
  • Elections
  • News Entertainment Media
  • Interest Groups
  • Linkage systems often provide the push in cases
    with significant impact on community!

8
Policy Agenda
  • Political Issues
  • These arise when people disagree about a problem
    and how to fix it.
  • Some issues will be considered, and others will
    not.
  • A governments policy agenda changes regularly.
  • Taking issues to the Supreme Court, identifies
    political issues our society feels are important.

9
Policymaking Institutions
  • Legislature
  • Congress
  • House of Representatives
  • Senate
  • Executive
  • President
  • Cabinet Executive Offices
  • Courts
  • Federal and State
  • Bureaucracies
  • Federal and State

10
Policy Impacts People
  • Impacts of Policies
  • Does it solve the problem?
  • Does it create more problems?

11
The Bill of RightsThen and Now
  • Civil Liberties
  • The legal constitutional protections against the
    government.
  • The Bill of Rights and the States
  • Written to restrict the national government.
  • Most are incorporated into state and local
    laws.

12
The Bill of RightsThen and Now
13
The Bill of RightsThen and Now
14
Freedom of Religion
  • The Establishment Clause
  • Congress shall make no law respecting the
    establishment of religion.
  • The Free Exercise Clause
  • Prohibits government from interfering with the
    practice of religion
  • Some religious practices may conflict with other
    rights, and then be denied or punished

15
Freedom of Expression
  • Prior Restraint
  • A government preventing material from being
    published.
  • Censorship.
  • May be permissible during wartime.
  • Alien Sedition Acts of 1789.
  • Espionage Act of 1917.
  • May be punished after something is published.
  • New York Times v. US 1971

16
Freedom of Expression
  • Free Speech and Public Order
  • Limited if it presents a clear and present
    danger
  • Defamation
  • Fighting Words
  • Speech in Special Places
  • Permissible to advocate the violent overthrow of
    government in abstract, but not to incite anyone
    to imminent lawless action
  • Limited if on private property, like a shopping
    center

17
Freedom of Expression
  • Free Press and Fair Trials
  • The public has a right to know what happens.
  • The press own information may not be protected.
  • Shield Laws

18
Freedom of Expression
  • Obscenity
  • No clear definition on what constitutes
    obscenity.
  • Miller v. California stated that materials were
    obscene if the work
  • appeals to a prurient interest in sex
  • showed patently offensive sexual conduct
  • lacks serious literary, artistic, political or
    scientific value

19
Freedom of Expression
  • Libel and Slander
  • Libel
  • The publication of false or malicious statements
    that damage someones reputation.
  • Slander
  • The same thing, only spoken instead of printed.
  • Different standards
  • private individuals v. public (politicians,
    celebrities) individuals
  • Difficult to prove

20
Freedom of Expression
  • Symbolic Speech
  • Nonverbal communication, such as burning a flag
    or wearing an armband.
  • Generally protected speech.
  • Constitutional to burn a flag (Texas v. Johnson).
  • Form of protest
  • Unconstitutional to burn a draft card.
  • Defacing government property

21
Freedom of Expression
  • Commercial Speech
  • Communication in the form of advertising.
  • Generally the most restricted and regulated form
    of speech.
  • License Plates government cannot make us mobile
    billboards.
  • Regulation of the Public Airwaves
  • Broadcast stations must follow FCC rules.
  • Cable / satellite has blurred the lines.
  • Ties in with obscenity.

22
Freedom of Expression
  • Freedom of Assembly
  • Right to Assemble
  • Generally permissible, but must meet reasonable
    local standards.
  • Balance between freedom to assemble and order in
    society.
  • Right to Associate
  • Freedom to join groups / associations without
    government interference.
  • Government cannot deny association due to
    societal norms.
  • Communists organizations during 1950s, White
    Supremacy groups today.

23
Defendants Rights
  • Interpreting Defendants Rights
  • Law enforcements are limited
  • Bill of Rights
  • Colonial Experience.
  • Failure to follow the rules usually invalidates a
    conviction.
  • Mapp v. Ohio exclusionary rule
  • Miranda v. Arizona self-incrimination/attorney
  • Gideon v. Wainwright right to counsel
  • Courts continually rule on what is constitutional
    and what is not.

24
Defendants Rights
25
Defendants Rights
  • Searches and Seizures
  • Probable Cause
  • The situation occurring when the police have
    reason to believe that a person should be
    arrested.
  • This is more than a hunch!
  • Unreasonable searches and seizures
  • Evidence is obtained in a haphazard or random
    manner.
  • Reasonable searches seizures
  • Exclusionary Rule
  • The rule that evidence, no matter how
    incriminating, cannot be introduced into trial if
    it was not constitutionally obtained.
  • Mapp v. Ohio

26
Defendants Rights
  • Self-Incrimination
  • The situation occurring when an individual
    accused of a crime is compelled to be a witness
    against himself or herself in court.
  • Fifth Amendment
  • Miranda warnings
  • Entrapments may be overturned

27
Defendants Rights
  • The Right to Counsel
  • The state must provide lawyers in most criminal
    cases.
  • Sixth Amendment
  • Gideon v. Wainwright
  • Trials
  • Plea bargaining
  • An actual bargain between the prosecution and
    defense.
  • Juries generally consist of 12 people
  • Unanimity is not always needed to convict.

28
Defendants Rights
  • Cruel and Unusual Punishment
  • Unreasonable Bail/Fines
  • Bail Reform Act of 1984
  • United States v. Salerno
  • The Death Penalty
  • Varies from state to state
  • Cannot be mandatory
  • Seen as constitutional
  • Furman v. Georgia (1972)
  • Gregg v. Georgia (1976)

29
The Right to Privacy
  • Is There a Right to Privacy?
  • The right to a private personal live free from
    the intrusion of government.
  • Not explicitly stated in the Constitution
  • Implied by the Fourth Ninth Amendment
  • Very debatable
  • Griswold v. Connecticut marital privacy v.
    Bowers v. Hardwick sexual privacy
  • Lawerence v. Texas changed precedent!

30
The Right to Privacy
  • Controversy over Abortion
  • Roe v. Wade (1973)
  • Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992)
  • Protections of those seeking an abortion
  • Rights of protesters

When should abortions be legal?
31
Understanding Civil Liberties
  • Civil Liberties and Democracy
  • People need the right to express themselves.
  • Courts continue to define the limits of civil
    liberties.
  • Civil Liberties and the Scope of Government
  • Must decide the line between freedom order
  • Civil liberties limit the scope of government
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