Article of confederation

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    The Articles of Confederation established the first government that unified the thirteen states that fought in the American Revolution. This documented created the structure for the confederation of the 13 states and went into effect on March 1, 1781 and lasted only eight years. The purpose of the document was to create a confederation of where each state kept its own sovereignty. Every state had its own independence as much as possible while the central government of the U.S. was only responsible

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    The Articles of Confederation are the bound that united the original states in a “firm league of friendship”(Encyclopedia Britannica,inc britannica.com). The articles were not ratified until 1781. It was regarded as a reliable constitution. Many people looked at them as a failure which then brought about the US Constitution. “Although the Articles of Confederation was a failure some of the clauses were put into the Constitution, so this helped with the beginning of the Constitution”(Encyclopedia

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    of the people (Schultz, 2014). Although, this was necessary the realization that a government of the people with written boundaries was vital to its growth. Consequently, to remedy this need the Articles of Confederation were developed in 1777, and finally were unanimously passed in 1781. These articles were intended to enact an effective governing body, but the manner in which it was written restricted its abilities instead allowing the states to retain the majority of power. Additionally, the job

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    Week 7 Reading Questions • What motivated the Congress to pass the Articles of Confederation? What were the successes of the Articles and what were the problems? As a result of the American Revolution there was a need of togetherness, or unity, between the states so they could represent the United States. After the Revolution, the people wanted a much weaker government. One of the successes of the Articles of Confederation was the expansion westward (Ohio, Tennessee, etc.). Many states also

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    The Articles of Confederation The Articles of Confederation was the first system of government that the united states ever put into force, and is the only one they ever wrote besides the constitution. The articles was created due to a need for the United States to unite during the american revolution, and was basically a loosely bound union of states, so it was obvious that this was essentially just to semi-unite the states in order to fight the british, and they would form a more stable form of

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    their independence), the Continental Congress was still without a constitution for their government. Delegates began to clobber out these principles between 1776 till November 1777. The end result was known as the Articles of Confederation. These articles described the confederation as a loosely united country. They also provided the union with a limited congress, and left the political power to the states. Taxation would be directed by the state legislature; only charging more duties from densely

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    The Articles of Confederation were a failure due to how weak they were. The United States had just fought their way out of tyranny, and because of that they gave all the power to the states, as to ensure no abuses of power, which ultimately didn’t give the government means to rule efficiently. For example, Congress could not tax, so inflation was caused by their overprinting. There was no national army, so when tensions arose, congress had to beg for troops, making the U.S. weak and vulnerable. Also

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    The Articles of Confederation were the original Constitution of the United States. Adopted by the second continental congress on November 15, 1777, and took effect after ratification on March 1, 1781. After a few years, the country started evolving and growing, leaving the articles insufficient to govern. Under the articles, congress had no power to tax, meaning they couldn't get their finances in order. They also couldn't raise a standing army, or erect trade barriers. There were no separation

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    How did the Articles of Confederation divide power between the nation and the states?What did this division reveal about the nature of the federal system of governance in the early 1780s? The Articles established a pragmatic division of power between Congress and the states. Congress would make foreign policy and decide major questions of national security, while the state's regulated their own domestic affairs-or “internal police.” But the real problem was not that the states were negligent; it

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    that loosely connected the states called the Articles of Confederation. Seven years later they realized the document was insufficient and began to revise it. The Framers came to the conclusion that a new document must be written all together and they produced the Constitution we have today. However, the Framers did want the states to have representation similar to the Articles of Confederation but not quite as troublesome for lawmakers. The Articles for the most part was a disaster. Framers realized

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