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Презентация на тему The political thought of the american revolution

The influence of old English constitutionalismBritish colonization of North America starts in 1607.The settlers keep their identity of English citizens in their full right;They have a direct political and legal connection with the King, as acknowledged
The Political Thought of the American Revolution The influence of old English constitutionalismBritish colonization of North America starts in No taxation without representationIn 1761, the Boston lawyer James Otis (1725-1783) claims Phases of the rebellionThis divide leads to the open rebellion of the A few English authors support the coloniesThere is at this stage a Paine and PriceAt the beginning of 1776 two very important books are Paine: Society vs. governmentIn Paine's thought there plays a central role the Paine: Government as necessary evilGovernment is a necessary evil that, in order JeffersonPaine's and Price's arguments are accepted by the revolutionary leaders;especially by those A new constitutionalism: The FederationBy approving the Declaration of Independence (1776) the “The Federalist”The new federalist thought is expressed especially by “The Federalist” (1787-1788), John AdamsAnother important author is the Massachusetts lawyer and 2nd US President Adams: The pursuit of happiness as state’s goalAdams' aim is designing a Especially important is the separation of powers, by which Adams also A deep change in constitutional thoughtBefore the era of the American Revolution By the end of the Revolutionary era, however, the Americans' idea A constitution thus could never be an act of a legislature From English citizens to AmericansThe colonists began the imperial crisis in the Although eighteenth-century Englishmen talked about the fixed principles and the fundamental For Englishmen therefore, as William Blackstone, the great eighteenth-century jurist pointed Nothing could be more strikingly different from what Americans came to It was true that the English Bill of Rights and the In the years following the Declaration of Independence, many Americans paid Checking legislative powerBy the mid-1780s many American leaders had come to believe The beginnings of judicial reviewWith the idea of a constitution as fundamental
Слайды презентации

Слайд 2 The influence of old English constitutionalism
British colonization of

The influence of old English constitutionalismBritish colonization of North America starts

North America starts in 1607.
The settlers keep their identity

of English citizens in their full right;
They have a direct political and legal connection with the King, as acknowledged and guaranteed by the various "charters” (fundamental laws of the colonies).
From the appeal to the principles of English common law (known through legal thinkers such as Coke and John Locke), through the experience of the Revolution a new form of constitutionalism emerges;
This constitutionalism introduces for the first time the new principle of a written and rigid constitution that is superior to the government and any law.


Слайд 3 No taxation without representation
In 1761, the Boston lawyer

No taxation without representationIn 1761, the Boston lawyer James Otis (1725-1783)

James Otis (1725-1783) claims the superiority of the fundamental

law of a community over the laws made by the English Parliament.
In his booklet of 1764 "The Rights of the British Colonies" he rejects the claim of the Parliament of imposing taxes upon the colonies;
This on the basis of the old English principle "no taxation without representation".
Otis mentions that the settlers elect their representatives in the colonial organs, not in London.
The settlers' consent to the English Commonwealth happens directly through the King, not through the Parliament.
This is the first formalization of the opposition between colonies and the metropole.

Слайд 4 Phases of the rebellion
This divide leads to the

Phases of the rebellionThis divide leads to the open rebellion of

open rebellion of the Boston Tea Party (1773) and

then to the proclamation of national independence.
Historically, this process develops as protests against single acts of the Parliament: The Sugar Act (1764, tax on sugar); Stamp Act (1765, tax on official stamp); Declaratory Act (1766, reaffirmation of the right of the Parliament to impose taxes in the colonies); Tea Act (1773, tax on tea to protect the East India Company).

Слайд 5 A few English authors support the colonies
There is

A few English authors support the coloniesThere is at this stage

at this stage a kind of alliance between the

settlers' struggle in America and the attempts in England by some radical political leaders and intellectuals to reform the English political system in a more democratic way.
We mention the politician John Wilkes (1727-1797) and the political writers Thomas Gordon (1662-1723) and John Trenchard (d. 1750).
This culminates in 1776 with the dramatic political events in America and with the publication in England of Jeremy Bentham's "Fragment on Government".

Слайд 7 Paine and Price
At the beginning of 1776 two

Paine and PriceAt the beginning of 1776 two very important books

very important books are published in England.
"Common sense" by

Tom Paine (1737-1809) and
"Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty" by Richard Price (1723-1791).
These very influential books clearly describe the nature of the opposition between England and American colonies, and (especially Paine)
They promote independence and the establishment of a republic.
The republic is presented as a more suitable form of state for a civil society independent and liberated from the mistakes of the English traditions.

Слайд 8 Paine: Society vs. government
In Paine's thought there plays

Paine: Society vs. governmentIn Paine's thought there plays a central role

a central role the opposition between "society" and "government".
He

criticizes the many authors who didn't see any distinction between them.
Inspired by Protestant ethics, he says that society descends from the positive need of addressing and solving human problems and needs that go beyond the individual sphere;
government, instead, has the negative function of repressing the natural evilness of human beings.
Society comes from our needs; government comes from our evilness and our sins.

Слайд 9 Paine: Government as necessary evil
Government is a necessary

Paine: Government as necessary evilGovernment is a necessary evil that, in

evil that, in order to work and to be

tolerated, must always be morally perfect and absolutely free from corruption.
This is not the case of the English government.
Therefore the colonies have the right to separate from it to establish their own.
Price's position is less radical and hopes that the colonial struggle will help England reform its politics and its government in more just and more free ways.

Слайд 10 Jefferson
Paine's and Price's arguments are accepted by the

JeffersonPaine's and Price's arguments are accepted by the revolutionary leaders;especially by

revolutionary leaders;
especially by those like Thomas Jefferson from Virginia

(future 3rd President) who are closer to the English republican tradition.
In his "Notes on Virginia" (1781), Jefferson describes his model of democratic and pluralistic society;
his ideal society is a rural society centered on the free cultivator, on local self-government, and on corresponding representative bodies.

Слайд 11 A new constitutionalism: The Federation
By approving the Declaration

A new constitutionalism: The FederationBy approving the Declaration of Independence (1776)

of Independence (1776) the colonies conduct a common war

on the basis of the Articles of Confederation, that will enter into force in 1781, and
The various states adopt constitutions (starting from New Hampshire, 1776).
The various states also have to decide the relations with the other former colonies.
Even if in the end a federalist approach prevails, there is significant opposition to it.
For example, the Virginian Richard Henry Lee (1732-1794) and George Mason (1725-1792) fear that federalism may become a threat not only for the autonomy of the states but also for the democratic character of the Union itself.

Слайд 12 “The Federalist”
The new federalist thought is expressed especially

“The Federalist”The new federalist thought is expressed especially by “The Federalist”

by “The Federalist” (1787-1788), a very important work by

Alexander Hamilton (1755-1804), James Madison (1751-1836), and John Jay (1745-1829).
The work is a collection of articles appeared on some newspapers in the State of New York to promote the ratification by the states of the federal Constitution approved by the Philadelphia Convention of 1787.

(more on this in part 2 of this class)

Слайд 14 John Adams
Another important author is the Massachusetts lawyer

John AdamsAnother important author is the Massachusetts lawyer and 2nd US

and 2nd US President John Adams.
His main theoretical works

are "Thoughts on Government" (1776), and
"Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America" (1787).
Adams' emphasizes especially the liberal separation and distribution of powers, and the prevalence of the "rule of laws" over the "rule of men".
Also, he thinks that the power of the legislative bodies must be kept in check and must not become excessive.

Слайд 15 Adams: The pursuit of happiness as state’s goal
Adams'

Adams: The pursuit of happiness as state’s goalAdams' aim is designing

aim is designing a form of government that pursues

the goal of the "happiness of society" - defined as welfare and security for the highest number of people.
The solution is the republic, defined as "rule of the laws and not of men".
The republic allows "the exact and impartial execution of the laws".
Its main characteristics are:
The principle of representation; the subdivision into two chambers; the distinction between legislative and executive power; the existence of a judicial power that is independent from the government and controls the legitimacy of both legislative and government acts.

Слайд 16
Especially important is the separation of powers,

Especially important is the separation of powers, by which Adams

by which Adams also anticipates the liberal constitutionalism of

the next century (Constant, Tocqueville, J. S. Mill).
Adams defends the two-chamber systems against the criticisms of the European radicals and Enlightenment authors such as Price, Turgot, Mably, who are fascinated by an idealized view of the English system with just one elective chamber.

Слайд 17 A deep change in constitutional thought
Before the era

A deep change in constitutional thoughtBefore the era of the American

of the American Revolution a constitution was rarely ever

distinguished from the government and its operations.
Traditionally in English culture a constitution referred not only to fundamental rights but also to the way the government was put together or constituted.
A constitution was the disposition of the government; it even had medical or physiological connotations, like the constitution of the human body.
The English constitution included both fundamental principles and rights and the existing arrangement of governmental laws, customs, and institutions.

Слайд 18
By the end of the Revolutionary era,

By the end of the Revolutionary era, however, the Americans'

however, the Americans' idea of a constitution had become

very different from that of the English.
A constitution was now seen to be no part of the government at all.
A constitution was a written document distinct from and superior to all the operations of government ' It was, as Thomas Paine said in 1791, "a thing antecedent to a government; and a government is only the creature of a constitution."

Слайд 19
A constitution thus could never be an

A constitution thus could never be an act of a

act of a legislature or of a government;
it had

to be the act of the people themselves, declared James Wilson in 1790, one of the principal framers of the federal Constitution of 1787; and "in their hands it is clay in the hands of a potter; they have the right to mould, to preserve, to improve, to refine, and to furnish it as they please."
It was a momentous transformation of meaning. It involved not just a change in the Americans' political vocabulary but an upheaval in their whole political culture.
In the short span of less than three decades Americans created a whole new way of looking at government.

Слайд 20 From English citizens to Americans
The colonists began the

From English citizens to AmericansThe colonists began the imperial crisis in

imperial crisis in the early 1760s thinking about constitutional

issues in much the same way as their fellow Britons.
Like the English at home they believed that the principal threat to the people's ancient rights and liberties had always been the prerogative powers of the king, those vague and discretionary but equally ancient rights of authority that the king possessed in order to carry out his responsibility for governing the realm.
Indeed, eighteenth-century English citizens saw their history as essentially a struggle between these conflicting rights, between a centralizing monarchy on one hand and localist-minded nobles and people on the other.

Слайд 21
Although eighteenth-century Englishmen talked about the fixed

Although eighteenth-century Englishmen talked about the fixed principles and the

principles and the fundamental law of the English constitution,

few of them doubted that Parliament, as the representative of the nobles and people and as the sovereign lawmaking body of the nation, was the supreme guarantor and interpreter of these fixed principles and fundamental law.
Parliament was in fact the bulwark of the people's liberties against the crown's encroachments; it alone defended and confirmed the people's rights.
The Petition of Right, the act of Habeas Corpus, the Bill of Rights were all acts of Parliament, statutes not different in form from other laws passed by Parliament.

Слайд 22
For Englishmen therefore, as William Blackstone, the

For Englishmen therefore, as William Blackstone, the great eighteenth-century jurist

great eighteenth-century jurist pointed out, there could be no

distinction between the "constitution or frame of government" and "the system of laws".
All were of a piece: every act of Parliament was part of the English constitution and all law, customary and statute, was thus constitutional.
"Therefore," concluded the English theorist William Paley, "the terms constitutional and unconstitutional, mean legal and illegal.

Слайд 23
Nothing could be more strikingly different from

Nothing could be more strikingly different from what Americans came

what Americans came to believe. Indeed, it was precisely

on this distinction between "legal" and "constitutional" that the American and the British constitutional traditions diverged at the Revolution.
During the 1760s and seventies the colonists came to realize that although acts of Parliament, like the Stamp Act of 1765, might be legal, that is, in accord with the acceptable way of making law, such acts could not thereby be automatically considered constitutional, that is, in accord with the basic principles of rights and justice that made the English constitution what it was.

Слайд 24
It was true that the English Bill

It was true that the English Bill of Rights and

of Rights and the act of settlement in 1689

were only statutes of Parliament, but surely, the colonists insisted, they were of "a nature more sacred than those which established a turnpike road."
Under this pressure of events the Americans came to believe that the fundamental principles of the English constitution had to be lifted out of the law-making and other institutions of government and set above them.

Слайд 25
In the years following the Declaration of

In the years following the Declaration of Independence, many Americans

Independence, many Americans paid lip service to the fundamental

character of their state constitutions, but like eighteenth-century Britons they continued to believe that their legislatures were the best instruments for interpreting and changing these constitutions.
The state legislatures were the representatives of the people, and the people, it seemed, could scarcely tyrannize themselves.
Thus in the late 1770s and early eighties, several state legislatures, acting on behalf of the people, set aside parts of their constitutions by statute and interpreted and altered them, as one American observed, "upon any occasion to serve a purpose."
Time and again the legislatures interfered with the governors' legitimate powers, rejected judicial decisions, disregarded individual liberties and property rights.

Слайд 26 Checking legislative power
By the mid-1780s many American leaders

Checking legislative powerBy the mid-1780s many American leaders had come to

had come to believe that the state legislatures, not

the governors as they had thought in 1776, were the political authority to be most feared.
Legislators were supposedly the representatives of the people who annually elected them; but "173 despots would surely be as oppressive as one," wrote Thomas Jefferson.
"An elective despotism was not the government we fought for."
It increasingly seemed to many that the idea of a constitution as fundamental law had no real meaning after all.
"if it were possible it would be well to define the extent of the Legislative power, but," concluded a discouraged James Madison in 1785, "the nature of it seems in many respects to be indefinite."
So the constitution had to be clearly distinct from statutory law, and put well above it.

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