RIGHTS GUARANTEED IN ORIGINAL TEXT CIVIL LIBERTIES VERSUS CIVIL RIGHTS

Similar documents
Civil Liberties. Chapter 4

Civil Liberties and Civil Rights. Government

Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. Aren t They the Same? 7/7/2013. Guarantees of Liberties not in the Bill of Rights.

e. City of Boerne v. Flores (1997) i. RFRA Unconstitutional f. Court Reversal on Use of Peyote in 2006 B. Freedom of Speech and Press 1.

Unit 6A STUDY GUIDE Civil Liberties

Civil Liberties and Civil Rights. Government

Order and Civil Liberties

6 Which U.S. senator indiscriminately accused certain American citizens of being "card-carrying" communists? a. James B. Allen b. Ted Kennedy c. Josep

Chapter 4: Civil Liberties

Civil Liberties & the Rights of the Accused CIVIL RIGHTS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES

AP US GOVERNMENT & POLITICS UNIT 6 REVIEW

THE POLITICS OF CIVIL LIBERTIES

Exam. 6) The Constitution protects against search of an individual's person, home, or vehicle without

CHAPTER 4: Civil Liberties

Bill of Rights. Bill or Rights Essential Questions;

STUDY GUIDE Chapter 04 TEST

Methods of Proposal. Method 1 By 2/3 vote in both the House and the Senate. [most common method of proposing an amendment]

Exam 4 Notes Civil Liberties

Civil Liberties and Public Policy

Civil Liberties. What are they? Where are they found?

Government Study Guide Chapter 4

Ch. 5 (pt 2): Civil Liberties: The Rest of the Bill of Rights

Civil Liberties and Public Policy. Edwards Chapter 04

Chapter 04: Civil Liberties Multiple Choice

Civil Liberties and Civil Rights

underlying principle some rights are fundamental and should not be subject to majoritarian control

Chapter , McGraw-Hill Education. All Rights Reserved.

e) City of Boerne v. Flores (1997) (1) RFRA Unconstitutional f) Court Reversal on Use of Peyote in 2006 B. Freedom of Speech and Press 1.

Chapter 15 CONSTITUTIONAL FREEDOMS

Civil Liberties Group Presentations Questions

Civil Rights and Civil Liberties

Learning Objectives 4.1

IR 26 CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS CHAPTER 13

Chapter 5 Civil Liberties Date Period

Civil Liberties. Individual freedoms & protections (Prohibitions of Government powers affecting liberties)

Civil Liberties and Civil Rights

AP Gov Chapter 4 Outline

6. The First Amendment prevents the government from restricting expression base on its a. ideas.

REPORTING CATEGORY 2: ROLES, RIGHTS & RESPONSIBILITIES OF CITIZENS

Basic Concepts of Civil Rights & Liberties

Significant Supreme Court Cases. Around the World Style

Landmark Decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court,

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE MAKING CONNECTIONS. - The application of the Bill of Rights is continuously interpreted by the courts

Chapter Four: Civil Liberties. Learning Objectives. Learning Objectives

APGoPo - Unit 2 Ch CIVIL LIBERTIES

In this article we are going to provide a brief look at the ten amendments that comprise the Bill of Rights.

Civil Liberties & the First Amendment CIVIL RIGHTS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES

TOPIC CASE SIGNIFICANCE

CHAPTER 04: Civil Liberties

Big Idea 2 Objectives Explain the extent to which states are limited by the due process clause from infringing upon individual rights.

Civil Liberties. Wilson chapter 18 Klein Oak High School

American Government. Topic 8 Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights

AP Government Ch. 4 Civil Liberties & Ch. 5 Civil Rights Study Guide Name Date Period

Name Class Period CIVIL LIBERTIES: FIRST AMENDMENT FREEDOMS. Describe the difference between civil liberties and civil rights.

The Heritage of Rights and Liberties

Hands on the Bill of Rights

AP Civics Chapter 4 Notes Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights

UNIT 5: JUDICIAL BRANCH, CIVIL LIBERTIES & CIVIL. Miss DeLong Exam Review RIGHTS

Political Science Legal Studies 217

Unit 3: Civil Liberties, Civil Rights

Persons possess and governments possess. rights; privileges rights; powers *liberties; powers liberties; rights rights; liberties

1 What is Liberty? What is Liberty? Freedom from excessive government control. Both economic and personal freedoms are guaranteed to individuals.

Chapter 10: Civil Liberties

United States Constitutional Law: Theory, Practice, and Interpretation

UNIT 2 CIVIL LIBERTIES AND CIVIL RIGHTS

TUFTS UNIVERSITY. U R B A N & E N V I R O M E N T A L POLICY AND P L A N N I N G L e g a l F r a m e w o r k s of S o c i a l P o l i c y

VA & US Government Exam Review: 2 nd Semester

The Incorporation Doctrine Extending the Bill of Rights to the States

The Struggle for Civil Liberties Part I

US CONSTITUTION PREAMBLE

Bill of Rights THE FIRST TEN AMENDMENTS

The Bill of Rights: The first 10 amendments to the U. S. Constitution

AP US Government Formative Assessment #2

PAY ATTENTION DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CIVIL LIBERTIES AND CIVIL RIGHTS?

Lesson 6.2: Civil Rights/Civil Liberties & Selective Incorporation. AP U. S. Government

HPISD CURRICULUM (SOCIAL STUDIES, GOVERNMENT) EST. NUMBER OF DAYS:10 DAYS

Ch 10 Practice Test

5. SUPREME COURT HAS BOTH ORIGINAL AND APPELLATE JURISDICTION

Day 7 - The Bill of Rights: A Transcription

Amendment Review 1-27

The UDL ft. The Founding Fathers/Patriarchs : February March Curriculum. United States Government (with a focus on rebuttal speeches)

d. bill of attainder e. Atlantic Charter

The Constitution. Structure and Principles

OUTLINE OF THE BILL OF RIGHTS (FIRST 10 AMENDMENTS)

Established judicial review; "midnight judges;" John Marshall; power of the Supreme Court

AP UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT & POLITICS SUPREME COURT REVIEW

SCOTUS Comparison Cases

Chapter 3. U.S. Constitution. THE US CONSTITUTION Unit overview. I. Six Basic Principles. Popular Sovereignty. Limited Government

CIVIL LIBERTIES AND RIGHTS

Name: Pd: Regarding Unit 6 material, from College Board:

Courts and Civil Liberties Pol Sci 344

FEDERALISM. As a consequence, rights established under deeds, wills, contracts, and the like in one state must be recognized by other states.

Objectives : Objectives (cont d): Sources of US Law. The Nature of the Law

AP UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS SUMMER ASSIGNMENT

A Guide to the Bill of Rights

During the constitutional debates many delegates feared that the Constitution as

THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION AND CIVIL LIBERTIES

Citizenship in the United States

APG UGRP Unit 3: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights

Fourth Exam American Government PSCI Fall, 2001

Transcription:

CIVIL LIBERTIES VERSUS CIVIL RIGHTS Both protected by the U.S. and state constitutions, but are subtly different: Civil liberties are limitations on government interference in personal freedoms. Civil rights are guarantees of equal or fair treatment by the government, regardless of one's personal characteristics. Emphasis in United States is on individual rather than collective rights. RIGHTS GUARANTEED IN ORIGINAL TEXT Several protections of individual liberties were included in the original text of the Constitution: Guarantee of right to habeas corpus. Prohibition of ex post facto laws. Prohibition of bills of attainder.

SELECTIVE INCORPORATION Bill of Rights originally only applied to the national government: Barron v. Baltimore (1833). 14th Amendment, passed and ratified after the Civil War, states in part: No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. SELECTIVE INCORPORATION Due process clause used to incorporate parts of the Bill of Rights into the practices of the states. Today most but not all of the Bill of Rights is incorporated. Important exception: right to a jury trial in civil disputes (7th Amendment).

FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION The First Amendment: Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. Prior restraint almost always unconstitutional. Unpopular opinions historically less tolerated: Schenck v. United States (1917) and the clear and present danger doctrine. Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969): narrower imminent lawless action standard. SYMBOLIC SPEECH Expression that is not printed or spoken also protected. Clothing-as-protest Black armbands as war protest Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969) Fuck the Draft jacket Cohen v. California (1971) Flag burning Texas v. Johnson (1989)

SYMBOLIC SPEECH LIMITS ON FREE EXPRESSION Exceptions: Other limits on freedom of expression: Overriding governmental interest (burning draft cards: United States v. O'Brien, 1968). Restrictions on reasonable time, place, and manner of protests; must be content-neutral. As part of threat of violence (cross burning: Virginia v. Black, 2003). Campaign related speech. School speech ( Bong Hits 4 Jesus case: Morse v. Frederick, 2007). Commercial speech. Libel (but higher standard for public figures. ). Obscenity and indecency.

RELIGIOUS LIBERTIES Also embodied in the First Amendment: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. Challenges: Government assistance to activity by religious groups: how much is OK? Balancing religious freedom with general obligations. THE ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE Until 20th Century: seen as restriction on a particular state religion only. Laws that promoted Christianity or monotheism were generally permitted. More recently expanded to religion in general. Dispute between separationist and accommodationist views.

THE LEMON TEST Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971): Laws must have a clear secular purpose. Laws must not favor one religion over another, or religion over non-religion. Laws must avoid excessive entanglement of public officials in religious affairs. Coercion also considered in some, more recent cases. EDUCATION AND ESTABLISHMENT Effort to draw a bright line particularly in K 12 education (see U.S. Department of Education website for details): Officials and employees cannot lead prayers. Schools cannot facilitate student led prayer as part of the curriculum. Student-initiated activity OK outside of structured curriculum. Judges' rulings have been ignored in many parts of the country. More entanglement accepted in higher education.

THE FREE EXERCISE CLAUSE Free exercise raises different issues: What constitutes a religion? What practices are important to a particular religion? Conflict with other, legitimate goals of government. THE SHERBERT-YODER TEST Established in Sherbert v. Verner (1963) and Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972): Is there a sincere religious belief? Does the law create a substantial burden on acting on that belief? If so, law must: Serve a compelling state interest. Must pursue that interest by the least restrictive means (lowest possible burden on religion).

THE PEYOTE CASE AND FREE EXERCISE Supreme Court decision in Employment Division v. Smith (1990) overturned the Sherbert-Yoder Test. Neutrality standard: religious beliefs do not exempt people from following generally-applicable laws. Sherbert-Yoder Test restored for federal laws by the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA). Some (but not all) states have also passed mini-rfras. RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS Traditionally viewed as a collective right. Second Amendment: A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. Found to be an individual right in D.C. v. Heller (2008). Incorporated by McDonald v. Chicago (2010). Like other rights, subject to limitations.

THE RIGHT TO PRIVACY No explicit right to privacy in the Constitution. Implied right found in Griswold v. Connecticut (1965). Applied to abortion in Roe v. Wade (1973), although the Supreme Court has allowed numerous limitations over the past four decades. Also: assisted suicide/euthanasia. PRIVACY AND GAY RIGHTS The Supreme Court's rulings on the right to have sex with someone of the same sex have evolved in recent decades: Bowers v. Hardwick (1986) allowed Georgia to prosecute a man caught engaging in sex with another man. Supreme Court reversed itself in Lawrence v. Texas (2003), a virtually identical case. (We will discuss the issue of same sex marriage along with civil rights.)

PROPERTY RIGHTS Due process clauses (5th and 14th amendments) limit taking life, liberty, or property. Property may be taken for public use (eminent domain) if just compensation is paid. Recent Supreme Court cases have restricted regulatory takings of property (government land-use regulation that diminishes property values). RIGHTS OF THE CRIMINALLY ACCUSED Much of the Bill of Rights deals with the rights of individuals suspected of criminal conduct: 4th Amendment: limits on search and seizure of evidence. 5th Amendment: right against self incrimination; double jeopardy; due process clause. 6th Amendment: right to trial by jury and assistance of counsel. 8th Amendment: prohibition of cruel and unusual punishments.

SEARCH AND SEIZURE General requirement for a warrant to search and seize evidence. Obtaining a warrant requires probable cause to believe a crime was committed. Exceptions: consent; places with limited or no reasonable expectation of privacy (open fields, plain view, motor vehicle). The exclusionary rule: Mapp v. Ohio (1961). TAKING THE FIFTH Miranda v. Arizona (1966): suspects must be informed of their rights before custodial interrogation. Protection against self incrimination. Protection against double jeopardy (but limited).

RIGHTS TO JURY TRIAL AND COUNSEL Defendant has right to jury trial for any crime that risks loss of liberty. Jury must be impartial and have a fair composition to the defendant. Right to assistance of counsel, even if indigent: Gideon v. Wainwright (1963). CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENTS Painful forms of punishment and execution common around founding era. Until 1930s, confessions extracted through torture were still accepted in some states. Today, mostly controversy over application of the death penalty. As of 2013, 18 states have abolished the death penalty (only applies to crime under state law).

NARROWING THE DEATH PENALTY Modern debate centers on the application of the death penalty; while still legal in general, there are limits: Atkins v. Virginia (2002) forbade execution of the mentally handicapped. Roper v. Simmons (2005) forbade execution of those who were minors when they committed crimes. Kennedy v. Louisiana (2008) forbade death penalty for crimes other than murder.