In the book “A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American Constitution” by Carol Berkin she explains the constitution from start to finish from how it all began, to the debates inside the convention and finally the end product. Berkin takes the reader and puts him directly in the middle of the convention of 1786; throughout the book you can feel the excitement, the frustration, the tensions between delegates and the overall commitment to making a new government work for all.…
People elects a person to the house of representatives and supreme court, so person wouldn’t have too much power : dangerous for the U.S. They divided the gov’t powers into three independent parts to prevent tranny. In Document C there aim was to divide and arrange the several offices into the three branches, so they won’t be so far separated as to have no constitutional control over each other. Tranny was prevented by giving each branch powers to block the other branches. I’m showing that without the three branches in the constitution the branches would make any rule they want without having someone telling them…
In 1786 Alexander Hamilton called for a Constitutional Convention to discuss the lack of a central government and to fix the Articles of Confederation. The colonies were told to send delegates to the convention. The 55 delegates met, they were composed of merchants, farmers, lawyers and crafters. They were supposed to fix the Articles of Confederation but they decided to create a whole new document and call it the Constitution. This new government would have three branches the Legislative, Judicial, and Executive. They also designed a system of Checks and Balances that would make sure that no branch would become too strong. They also made the Constitution able to be changed if necessary. Not all the delegates were professional people they were…
The United States Constitution’s Article Four has many important details that helped make up our country’s laws. Article Four has four sections explaining the state acts and records, rights of citizens, new states into the Union, and the guarantees to the States. Section One explains that all states should honor each other’s laws. Also, it describes if a person is convicted after performing a crime and leaves that state, they must return back to the state they committed the crime. For example, if a citizen is convicted of a crime in California he or she should be considered guilty even in a different state like Mississippi. Section Two of Article Four clarifies that citizens should be treated fairly…
There were various domestic and international issues that led to the Constitutional Convention of 1787. The states were governed by the Articles of Confederation and not the Constitution. Under the Articles of Confederation the national government had very limited authority. As a result of the limited authority, the national government could not fix many domestic issues such as levying taxes. “The Articles prohibited Congress from levying taxes, so it had to ask the states for money,” (Patterson 2010). The lack of tax revenues from the states had put the national government is a desperate position. “By 1786, the national government was so desperate for funds that it sold the navy’s ships and reduced the army to fewer than a thousand soldiers-this at a time when British had an army in Canada and Spain had one in Florida,” (Patterson 2010). Another domestic issue occurred when New Hampshire established a Navy along its 18 mile of coastline. On…
The Preamble to the Constitution is saying that the people in America need to unite to have peace, and to defend and provide common defense. To have peace in our nation for us and our generations to come. We must respect and follow the laws. We need to help the people in need.…
Fifty-five men gather together. One room to delegate in. Many months to process. Thirty-nine signatures to approve. One document to change the history of what is now called the United States of America. This document just so happens to be the United States Constitution—conjured up to be a revised version of the Articles of Confederation—and became a base on how our country and its government ebb and flow. Even though this document was ratified in 1788, the amendments of the Constitution were fashioned to keep up with the struggles and troubles “we the people” have; thus qualifying our Constitution to still be applicable and relevant.…
The Constitution Café written by Christopher Phillips is mainly about the viewpoints of Americans around the country and what could be different about the Constitution. While the majority of Americans he met from the meetings felt like there should be a few things added to the articles of the Constitution, because things are different today than when it was first written in 1787. The book informs the readers on the basics of our rights and understanding more about the Constitution itself.…
Since 1994, the HIMSS Nicholas E. Davies Award of Excellence has recognized outstanding achievement in the implementation and value from health information technology, specifically EHRs. This program promotes EHR adoption through sharing information and lessons learned on implementation strategies, financial return on investment and value of the EHR to improve patient care and outcomes. The 2012 Davies Enterprise and Ambulatory Award are in case study format and each consists of two categories: Core Case Studies and Menu Case Studies. 2012 Davies Ambulatory Award winners are Coastal Medical, Jeremy L Bradley, United Health Care and Enterprise Award winners are Hawai’i Pacific Health and Mount Sinai Medical Center.…
At the moment, the British constitution is unwritten, although it may be less misleading to call it uncodified as various elements of the constitution are written down. The term uncodified means the constitution is not all kept in a single document, but is spread about in various pieces of legislature. It also means British laws, policies and codes are developed through statutes, common law, convention, and recently European Union law. Although the British constitution does not have a clear set of rules in one single document, it does clearly state in various documents where political power is held, and how it is allocated.…
The Constitution of the United States of America does not specifically grant the courtspower to interpret the Constitution, but it furnishes sufficient verbal basis for the power.…
Thanks to the Almighty God, Who gave me the strength to accomplish the project with sheer hard work and honesty.…
Indian Constitution is quasi-federal in nature. In the view of K.C. Wheare Indian Constitution has established a system of Government which is at the most quasi-federal, almost devolutionary in character, a unitary state with subsidiary federal features rather than a federal state with subsidiary unitary features. Our constitution says “India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States”. Unlike U.S. Constitution which is typically federal in nature Indian constitution envisages a constitution set up in which the states will compromise the federal nature in the national interest or for maintaining the unitary feature of the administration. One such instance where state loses its federal nature and total independence is when there is operation of Article 356 of the constitution in the state. This is one of the situations where in the state is totally under the control of the Union. Our constitution makers with lot of foresight had incorporated this provision, to invoke only in the rarest of the rare circumstances when there are circumstances justifying emergency as given under Article 355. But ever since the origin of the constitution this article is being misused because of power politics and political high handedness, and more often state governments have been made the scapegoat of ‘non-practical politics’ and have been made to quit office under the constitutional umbrella of Article 356.…
The Constitution of India is the supreme law of India. It lays down the framework defining fundamental political principles, establishes the structure, procedures, powers, and duties of government institutions, and sets out fundamental rights, directive principles, and the duties of citizens. It is the longest[1] written constitution of any sovereign country in the world, containing 448 [Note 1] articles in 24 parts, 12 schedules and 97 amendments. Besides the English version, there is an official Hindi translation. B. R. Ambedkar is the Chief Architect of Indian Constitution. [2][3][4]…
a. written- one which has been given the definite written form at a particular time.\…