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Civics 11 Course Review “What won’t kill you, Will only make you stronger.”

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Civics 11 Course Review. “What won’t kill you, Will only make you stronger.”. Historical Roots of Canadian Gov’t. Magna Carta – 1215 English Civil War (ended 1649) – The Enlightment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Civics 11 Course Review

Civics 11Course Review

“What won’t kill you,Will only make you stronger.”

Page 2: Civics 11 Course Review

Historical Roots of Canadian Gov’t

• Magna Carta – 1215• English Civil War (ended 1649) – The Enlightment• English Bill of Rights (1689) – Parliamentary system

created and end of absolute monarchy. Freedoms guaranteed: speech, press, rel., assembly, from search

• American Revolution (1776) – Decl. Of Independence

• French Rev. (1789) – Declaration of the Rights of Man

Page 3: Civics 11 Course Review

Events Which Shaped British Rule in NA• Seven Years’ War (1756-63) & Battle of the Plains of

Abraham (1759)• The Quebec Act (1774) – French Civil Code• Constitutional Act of 1791 – split Quebec into 2

colonies.• War of 1812 – evol of towards sovereignty for

Canada.• Rebellions of 1837 – change to politics in Canada• Confederation (1867) – BNA Act – Dominion of

Page 4: Civics 11 Course Review

Structure of Government

• Federal system – divisions of power – feds & provs• Transfer payments• Equalization payments

Page 5: Civics 11 Course Review

Branches of Gov’t

1.) Legislative (parliament)- Elected House of Commons (Lower) (308 seats) – MPs from political parties- Appointed Senate (Upper House)- Monarch

• Purpose: to make laws

Page 6: Civics 11 Course Review

2.) Executive- Monarch- PM- Cabinet- Bureaucracy

• Purpose: to carry out laws

Page 7: Civics 11 Course Review

3.) Judicial Branch- court system- highest court: Supreme Court of Canada- headed by Chief Justice

• Purpose: to interpret laws

Page 8: Civics 11 Course Review

Federal Legislative Branch• Majority / Minority gov’t• Opposition• Third parties• Ministers form Cabinet (Executive Council)• H of C – speaker, backbenchers, official opp and

shadow cabinet, clerks, sergeant at arms, mace• Senate – seats, reform• Monarch & Governor General – role• Passage of a bill - stages

Page 9: Civics 11 Course Review

Provincial Legislative Branch

• No senate• Legislative Assembly = H of C• 85 seats – MLAs• Premier – Gordon Campbell• Lieutenant Governor – Steven Point

Page 10: Civics 11 Course Review

Provincial Executive Branch

• Cabinet headed by Premier• Ministries with Ministers as head• Provincial jurisdiction – education, health,

highways, forestry, environment, municipal affairs, etc.

Page 11: Civics 11 Course Review

Territorial Governments

• Yukon, Northwest Territories, Nunavut• In the Constitution, they are under federal

gov’t jurisdiction.• Elected assemblies with Premier and

appointed Cabinet• Legally, feds have final say in decision-making.• Feds have given more power to territories.

Page 12: Civics 11 Course Review

Municipal Gov’ts• Under provincial jurisdiction• Elected mayor and council• Pass bylaws• Responsible for city streets, transit, building

permits, garbage, sewage, local parks and sports facilities.

• Revenue comes from tax on land and buildings, grants from prov and fed gov’ts

• Municipalities can come together on issues – regional districts (CRD in Victoria)

Page 13: Civics 11 Course Review

Political Ideologies

• Political spectrum – left-wing, centre, right-wing• Communism, Socialism, Liberalism, Conservatism, Fascism.• See chart• Canadian political parties:

- NDP – left- Liberals – centre- Conservatives – right- Bloc Quebecois – originally single issue, but now mix of left and right policies.- Green – also single issue, but now much broader.

Page 14: Civics 11 Course Review

• BC politics:- NDP – left of centre- BC Liberals – right of centre- Green – no seats ever

Page 15: Civics 11 Course Review

Process of Elections

• Dissolution – ending Parliament• Nomination – choosing a candidate to run• Enumeration – compiling eligible voters• Campaigning – candidates communicate beliefs

to voters• Balloting – casting a vote on election day• Tabulation – counting votes• Voting system – First-Past-the-Post or simple

plurality voting system

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• Minority gov’t• Majority gov’t• Coalition gov’t• Rep-by-pop• Redistribution• Alternative voting systems• Recalls• Referendum

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Rights and Responsibilities• Rule of law• Common law• Criminal law & Civil Law• Charter of Rights & Freedoms (1982)• BC Human Rights Code• Citizenship – rights & responsibilities• Immigration, refugees, permanent residents• Minority rights• Aboriginal rights

Page 18: Civics 11 Course Review

Evolution of Canadian Independence

• BNA Act (1867)• WWI (1914-8)• Halibut Treaty (1923)• British Commonwealth (1926)• Statute of Westminster (1931)• WWII (1939-45)• Canadian Flag (1965) – Lester B. Pearson• Patriation of Constitution (1982)

- Constitution Act, 1982 – new part of Constitution

Page 19: Civics 11 Course Review

Canada’s Role in Global Conflicts

• WWI (1914-18)• WWII (1939-45)• Cold War (1946-89)

- NATO, Korean War, NORAD,

Page 20: Civics 11 Course Review

Canada & the United Nations

• Canada – middle power• US & USSR - superpowers• Pearson – Pres of General Assembly (1950s)• Purpose – to keep peace in the world• Structure – GA, SC, Secretariat, the Secretary-

General

Page 21: Civics 11 Course Review

Canada’s Role in the UN

• One of founding members• Peacekeeping – Suez Crisis (1956), Congo,

Cyprus, Middle East, former Yugoslavia.• Some failures – Somalia (1993), Rwanda (1994)

with Canadian General Romeo Dallaire.• Prominent Canadians – John Humphrey, Louise

Frechette, Louise Arbour, Stephen Lewis.

Page 22: Civics 11 Course Review

UN Agencies• International Court of Justice• International Criminal Court• Kyoto Accord• Mine Ban Treaty (Ottawa Treaty)• WHO• UNESCO• UNICEF• World Bank• International Monetary Fund

Page 23: Civics 11 Course Review

International Organizations

• World Trade Organization (WTO)• Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)• Organization of Petroleum Exporting

Countries (OPEC)• NATO, NORAD, NAFTA, Commonwealth, G-8,

G-20,

Page 24: Civics 11 Course Review

Canada & Foreign Aid

• Bilateral Aid• Multilateral Aid• NGOs• CIDA

Page 25: Civics 11 Course Review

Canada & International Rights

• La Francophonie• UN Declaration of Human Rights (1948)

- Eleanor Roosevelt• Apartheid• Civil Rights Movement (US)

Page 26: Civics 11 Course Review

Canada & the US

• UN & NATO & NORAD• Economy & Trade – till recently, largest

bilateral trading partners in the world.• Free Trade – NAFTA• Problems – softwood lumber dispute• Military problems – anti-missile, Iraq• Arctic Sovereignty

Page 27: Civics 11 Course Review

International Conflict Since 1991

• Gulf War (1990-1)• Former Yugoslavia (1995) – NATO• Afghanistan (2001-present) – NATO• Iraq War (2003)• Peacekeeping to Peacemaking (since 1999)

Page 28: Civics 11 Course Review

Effecting Civic Change (p.199)

• Voting• Join a political party• Set a good example• Write letters to the editor/MLA/MP• Set up a blog• Peaceful protest demonstration• Join a pressure group• Work for an NGO

Page 29: Civics 11 Course Review

Civic Change in Democratic Gov’ts• Careful to have support of voting public, or run

risk of losing power in elections.• Change can be slow – debate and pass laws.• Examples:- Medicare & Canada Pension Plan – 1960s under

Lester Pearson’s Liberal gov’t.- The Charter & Bilingualism – 1970s & 80s under

Pierre Trudeau’s Liberal gov’t- NAFTA – 1989 under Brian Mulroney’s

Progressive Conservative gov’t.

Page 30: Civics 11 Course Review

Methods to Gain Input Democratically

• Open house• Public hearing• Public agenda meeting• Delegation• Public planning session• referendum

Page 31: Civics 11 Course Review

Authoritarian Gov’ts

• Dictatorship with military force• Examples:- Nazi Germany – 1933 Hitler in power, 1935

Nuremberg Laws, by 1941 concentration & extermination camps – Holocaust

- Communist Soviet Union – 1920s Joseph Stalin is leader, farms taken away from peasants and run by gov’t, protesters sent to concentration camps in Siberia.

Page 32: Civics 11 Course Review

Individuals Who Influenced Civic Change

• Emily Murphy – womens’ rights in Canada• MLK Jr.• Mohandas Gandhi• Rosa Parks• Terry Fox• Craig Kielburger• Rick Hansen

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NGOs• Non-profit orgs for a particular purpose• Work with governments, but not controlled by

policies• In the early days, concerned with anti-slavery,

women’s suffrage, world disarmament.• Examples:- CIDA, World Vision, Greenpeace, MADD, Amnesty

International, Red Cross, Corporate Watch, Save the Children, Sierra Club, United Way, WWF.

Page 34: Civics 11 Course Review

Social Safety Net

• Workers’ Compensation (Workmens’ Comp)• Old Age Security (Old Age Pension)• Employment Insurance (UI)• Child Tax Benefit (Family Allowance)• Medicare (Hospital Insurance)• Canada Pension Plan• Canada Assistance Plan

Page 35: Civics 11 Course Review

Fundamental Principles of Democracy

1. Rule of Law- Foreign Policy- Charter of R & F2. Equality- Women, Aboriginal people, Minorities3. Freedoms- Canadian Bill of Rights (1960), The Charter(1982)

Page 36: Civics 11 Course Review

4. Appointed / Elected Decision-Makers- Judges, Senate, Crown Corp & Agency Execs,5. Common Good vs Rights of the Individual- Komagata Maru Incident, Bill 101, WMA,

International Criminal Court, Kosovo, Mine Ban Treaty (Ottawa Treaty)