Bibliographic Information

Approaching democracy

Larry Berman, Bruce Allen Murphy

Pearson/Prentice Hall, c2007

5th ed

  • : pbk

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DVD title: ABC News, Prentice Hall video library: American government. Student library

Includes bibliographical references and index

HTTP:URL=http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0610/2006008908.html Information=Table of contents

"Teaching and Learning Classroom edition"--Cover

Description and Table of Contents

Description

For undergraduate courses in introductory American Government. Approaching Democracy is the American Government book with a clear and compelling central theme, designed to elevate student interest. Approaching Democracy addresses the evolving nature of the American experiment in democratic government. It teaches students the theory and the basics of American political science, the political history of this nation, and provides the critical thinking skills needed to analyze these evolving relationships. This new Teaching and Learning Classroom (TLC) edition introduces new features and incorporates more "student empowerment" tools to reinforce how American Government is relevant to students' lives today. The title and theme for this book come from Vaclav Havel, a former dissident Czech playwright once imprisoned by the his country's Communist government and later elected president. Addressing a joint session of the U.S. Congress on February 1, 1990, Havel noted that with the collapse of the Soviet Union, millions of people from Eastern Europe were involved in a historically irreversible process: beginning their quest for freedom and democracy. And it was the United Stated of America that provided the model for these newly freed peoples. But Havel put his own spin on the notion of American democracy as a model. "As long as people are people," Havel explained, "democracy, in the full sense of the word, will always be no more than an ideal. In this sense, you too are merely approaching democracy. But you have one great advantage: you have been approaching democracy uninterruptedly for more than two hundred years, and your journey toward the horizon has never been disrupted by a totalitarian system." Larry Berman and Bruce Allen Murphy, long-time teachers of the introductory American Political science course in both large and small public and private universities, set out to write a book that offers a clear theme - a theme that is just as relevant, if not more so today than when it was first presented - in a highly readable, easy-to-understand format. Both authors enjoy teaching and are actively engaged in new methods of engaging students and empowering them to participate in political discourse.

Table of Contents

I. FOUNDATIONS OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY 1. Approaching Democracy 2. The Founding and the Constitution 3. Federalism II. INSTITUTIONS OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY 4. Congress 5. The Presidency 6. The Judiciary 7. The Bureaucracy III. PROCESSES OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY 8. Public Opinion 9. Political Parties 10. Participation, Voting, and Elections 11. Interest Groups 12.The Media IV. LIBERTIES AND RIGHTS IN AMERICAN DEMOCRACY 13. Civil Liberties 14. Civil Rights and Political Equality V. POLICY MAKING IN AMERICAN DEMOCRACY 15. Domestic and Economic Policy 16. Foreign Policy

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