7. Magna Carta
• Charter: written grant of authority
• Limited the king’s power
• Rule of law
– All people, including monarch, are subject
to the law
8. Petition of Right
• Limited government
– King’s power not absolute
• Prohibited arbitrary arrests and
quartering of troops in private homes
without owners consent
9. English Bill of Rights, 1689
• Individual rights
– Rights that are yours simply because you’re
human
• New rights included:
– Right to petition king
– Right to bear arms
– Freedom from cruel and unusual punishment
– Right to trial by jury
11. Thomas Hobbes
• Social-contract theory
– Hobbes believed man in natural state
was “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and
short.”
– People willing to give up some
freedom in exchange for peace and
order
• Groundwork for idea that government
formed by consent of the people
12. John Locke
– Social-contract theory
• Locke believed man in natural state was equal and
enjoyed natural rights
• Agreed with Hobbes that people willing to give up
some freedoms in exchange for government’s
protection
• Argued that if government failed to protect natural
rights that people had the right to overthrow the
government and make a new one
– Natural rights
• Rights all people have simply because they’re
human
• Includes life, liberty and property
14. Baron de Montesquieu
• Charles-Louis de Secondat
• Separation of Powers
– Government should be organized in a
way that prevents any one person or
group from dominating
• Three Branches
– Executive, Legislative, Judicial
– Separate functions for each branch
15. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
• Popular sovereignty
– General will of the people (people
power)
– In order for government to have
legitimacy it must be based on
popular sovereignty
• If government acts against general will,
it has broken social contract and should
be dissolved
16. Mayflower Compact, 1620
• Agreed to live in a “Civil Body Politic”
and obey equal laws created by chosen
representatives
• First written framework for self-
government
17. Massachusetts Body of
Liberties
• New England’s first code of laws
• Guaranteed basic rights
18. Declaration of Independence
• Government formed to protect
“unalienable” (can’t be taken away)
rights
– Life, liberty, pursuit of happiness
• Government gets its “powers from the
consent of the governed”
– Popular sovereignty