Democratic Citizenship

     Kaitlyn McClaflin
What Does it Mean to Live In a
Democracy?
 Definition of a democracy: government by the
 people, rule of the majority
What Does it Mean to Live in a
Democracy?
 Our country is a democracy. That means it is run by
  the people for the people.
 Citizens in our democracy have rights
   Right to speak freely
   Right to practice our religion
   Right to vote
 Citizens in a democracy also have responsibilities
   Choose our leaders
   Keep informed about what is going on with our
    government
   Help make their community a good place to live
 A democracy needs active citizens in order to work.
Reinventing Democracy- Shift of
Power from Corporations and
Government to Ordinary
Americans
Voter Initiative:
 Problem: Citizens have few opportunities to take the idea of
  bring issues to public attention
 Solution: Citizens may enact or reject laws directly through the
  voting booth rather than through the voting booth rather than
  through elected officials
 How this works: Citizens gather a specified number of
  signatures on a petition. An initiative then appears on the ballot,
  and is enacted or rejected by popular vote.
 Why this is a good idea: Citizens can propose new laws, state
  constitutional amendments, or city or county charter
  amendments.
Reinventing Democracy- Shift of
Power from Corporations and
Government to Ordinary
Americans
Reclaim the Public Airwaves:
 Problem: Private broadcasters control what is the public owns. In return
  for free licenses to use taxpayer property broadcasters give us a steady
  stream of increasingly coarse, redundant, superficial programming and
  exclusively decide who says what on our public airwaves.
 Solution: Congress should create a new broadcast vehicle, a national,
  non profit, nonpartisan membership organization, Audience Network
  would be granted one hour of prime time television and one hour of
  drive time radio on every commercial channel each day
 How this works: It would function as a separate licensee, airing diverse
  programming shaped by the membership, which would be open to all
  citizens over age sixteen for a nominal fee.
 Why this is a good: This would redress the long standing
  disenfranchisement that millions of viewers and listeners have suffered
  under the current authoritarian government.
What is Your Role as a Citizen?
 Definition of a citizen: a person owning loyalty to
  and entitled by birth or naturalization to the
  protection of a state or nation
 Patriotic
 Children
 Citizen Action
Patriotic
 Definition of patriotic: feeling,
    expressing or inspiring by love
    for one’s nation


•   Need to know the great cause of
    American and why this country
    is worth fighting for


•   Ask not what your country can
    do for you but what you can do
    for your country.


•   Progress of this country is a
    result of what citizens have
    done when gotten together and
    have created a social movement
Children
 The right of children to
  participate in society
  including the right to
  education, to diverse
  sources of information,
  and the freedoms to
  associate, assemble and
  to express opinions.
 Children as activists
   The lives of the young
    people who participate in
    these events were
    changed forever
   Every child is entitled to
    participate in making their
    world a better place to live
Citizen Action
 In all that is happening in
  the world today- how
  involved should citizens
  be in trying to actively
  make a change?
 Everyone’s voice matters
 If we all work together on
  a certain issue we can
  make a difference
 Good citizens obey laws
  and vote at election times
   What people do between
    elections is what decides
    weather elections are
    meaningful.
Sources
 Democratic Revolution in an Age of Autocracy
 Civics Education: Patriotism or Skeptism?
 Children: Toward Their Civic Skills and Civic
  Involvement
 Introduction to A Public Citizen’s Action
  Manual

Democratic citizenship

  • 1.
    Democratic Citizenship Kaitlyn McClaflin
  • 2.
    What Does itMean to Live In a Democracy?  Definition of a democracy: government by the people, rule of the majority
  • 3.
    What Does itMean to Live in a Democracy?  Our country is a democracy. That means it is run by the people for the people.  Citizens in our democracy have rights  Right to speak freely  Right to practice our religion  Right to vote  Citizens in a democracy also have responsibilities  Choose our leaders  Keep informed about what is going on with our government  Help make their community a good place to live  A democracy needs active citizens in order to work.
  • 4.
    Reinventing Democracy- Shiftof Power from Corporations and Government to Ordinary Americans Voter Initiative:  Problem: Citizens have few opportunities to take the idea of bring issues to public attention  Solution: Citizens may enact or reject laws directly through the voting booth rather than through the voting booth rather than through elected officials  How this works: Citizens gather a specified number of signatures on a petition. An initiative then appears on the ballot, and is enacted or rejected by popular vote.  Why this is a good idea: Citizens can propose new laws, state constitutional amendments, or city or county charter amendments.
  • 5.
    Reinventing Democracy- Shiftof Power from Corporations and Government to Ordinary Americans Reclaim the Public Airwaves:  Problem: Private broadcasters control what is the public owns. In return for free licenses to use taxpayer property broadcasters give us a steady stream of increasingly coarse, redundant, superficial programming and exclusively decide who says what on our public airwaves.  Solution: Congress should create a new broadcast vehicle, a national, non profit, nonpartisan membership organization, Audience Network would be granted one hour of prime time television and one hour of drive time radio on every commercial channel each day  How this works: It would function as a separate licensee, airing diverse programming shaped by the membership, which would be open to all citizens over age sixteen for a nominal fee.  Why this is a good: This would redress the long standing disenfranchisement that millions of viewers and listeners have suffered under the current authoritarian government.
  • 6.
    What is YourRole as a Citizen?  Definition of a citizen: a person owning loyalty to and entitled by birth or naturalization to the protection of a state or nation  Patriotic  Children  Citizen Action
  • 7.
    Patriotic  Definition ofpatriotic: feeling, expressing or inspiring by love for one’s nation • Need to know the great cause of American and why this country is worth fighting for • Ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country. • Progress of this country is a result of what citizens have done when gotten together and have created a social movement
  • 8.
    Children  The rightof children to participate in society including the right to education, to diverse sources of information, and the freedoms to associate, assemble and to express opinions.  Children as activists  The lives of the young people who participate in these events were changed forever  Every child is entitled to participate in making their world a better place to live
  • 9.
    Citizen Action  Inall that is happening in the world today- how involved should citizens be in trying to actively make a change?  Everyone’s voice matters  If we all work together on a certain issue we can make a difference  Good citizens obey laws and vote at election times  What people do between elections is what decides weather elections are meaningful.
  • 10.
    Sources  Democratic Revolutionin an Age of Autocracy  Civics Education: Patriotism or Skeptism?  Children: Toward Their Civic Skills and Civic Involvement  Introduction to A Public Citizen’s Action Manual