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Explore Voting & Elections in the United States of America: Articles of Confederation (1777)

This guide provides information & resources about civic literacy and the Florida civic literacy requirement..

Articles of Confederation

After the Revolutionary War, the 13 states constituting the new nation were organized under the Articles of Confederation. This“constitution” was in effect from 1781 until the present constitution was ratified in 1789. At the time, the states were concerned about a strong central government; they were afraid that their individual needs would be ignored with a national government that had too much power, with the resulting abuses that oftentimes went along with that power. The Articles sought to establish a constitution that provided individual states the largest share of power. The Articles set up a national legislature that could raise an army and a navy, declare war, borrow and coin money, run a postal system, and handle relations with American Indians. Each state could send two delegates to congress but had only one vote. Delegates from 7 of the13 states had to be present to establish a quorum and conduct business. Delegates were elected for one-year terms and could not serve for more than three years in any six-year period. Having neither an executive nor a judicial branch, but only a unicameral legislature, the government was largely ineffective in spite of its progressive stand, and the Articles of Confederation contained many flaws. For example, the government could not really enforce its mandate over individual states because it left it up to each of them to collect taxes and provide for security. Thus, the Articles’ main mission was to enforce foreign policy and negotiate treaties. Each state had veto power, and states’ interests took precedence over the national or common good. After much deliberation, the states agreed to call a Constitutional Convention in 1787 in order to replace the Articles. For more information, see Articles of Confederation (2001), Jensen (1940), Kaminski (2001), and Rakove (1979).

Larry E. Sullivan. The SAGE Glossary of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. SAGE Publications, Inc, 2009.

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