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    Article of Confederation and the Constitution Student’s Name Institutional Affiliation Article of Confederation and the Constitution Introduction The article of confederation was the first constitution on the United States of America‚ established in 1781 between the thirteen former British colonies (Krill‚ 2014) . During this time‚ the colonies needed to unite to fight against the British government and give them power. Although the article of confederating succeeded in giving the

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    Abstract The simple difference between the Articles of Confederation and US Constitution is that the articles were not strong enough to hold our young nation together. The articles operated the US as separate states. Under the articles‚ it was very difficult to pass laws since the requirement of 9 out of the 13 states ’ approval was needed for ratification. The Articles created a loose confederation of sovereign states and a weak central government‚ leaving most of the power with the state governments

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    revolution‚ America face three challenges: the country hand no real government‚ no financial system‚ and no foreign friend. The first task was to develop a real government. That’s when the Articles of Confederation were established in 1777. They were not ratified until 1781. The main purpose of the Articles of Confederation was to serve as the unofficial constitution through the American War. It was a “transition between

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    Leland Pinkham Period Apush Articles of confederation era: * Each state functioned as its own little country * No national currency‚ many state currencies * Paper money issued as a promise for hard specie such as gold and silver * High inflation * Newburgh conspiracy 1783: plan by unpaid continental army officers to force congress to assume powers of taxation over states * Northwest territory: * Ohio‚ Indiana‚ Illinois‚ Wisconsin‚ and Michigan area given

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    The Articles of Confederation came prior to what is known as the Constitution. The Articles of Confederation were ratified on March 1‚ 1781‚ and the Constitution was signed on September 17‚ 1787. The two documents were signed in years of one another; however‚ they share similarities as well as differences. Overview and Issues with The Articles of Confederation The first draft of The Articles of Confederation was composed by Benjamin Franklin; three additional drafts were created (History.com‚ 2009)

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    The most important similarity between the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution of the United States was that congress had the power to make laws and states had power within their borders. The Constitution fix the problems with in the Articles of Confederation with Congress not having enough power to collect taxes from the state‚ regulate trade between other countries and to force states to follow laws that were made and have an Executive and Legislative branch of government made. With the

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    difference between the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution was the strength in governmental foundation‚ protection of rights‚ and proper representation. The Articles of Confederation was a single legislative body with no separation of branches. The Constitution sought to provide a stable foundation for a better qualified government. The Articles of Confederation had provided too much control and supremacy for the government in any decisions they made. The Articles of Confederation didn’t seem to

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    Under the control of the Articles of Confederation‚ the central government was weak. Congress was a unicameral legislature that made laws. There were no executive or judiciary branches. Some of the weaknesses included that Congress can’t pass laws unless nine states supported it‚ the Articles could not be amended unless all thirteen states approved it‚ Congress could not collect taxes‚ and they also could not raise an army. The seventh article states "When land forces are raised by any state‚ for

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    Articles of Confederation VS. Constitution Over time the United states has been operated under two constitutions. on being the Articles of Confederation and the other being the Constitution. The two documents have common similarities. One being that they were both established by the same people. This is shown very clearly at the bottom of the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution. Where some of the signatures at the bottom of both documents are the same. Another one of the similarities are

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    There were many different beliefs in the Constitution and the Articles of Confederation. Many people did not want the Constitution to be ratified because of the fact that it gave the majority of the power to the central government. Others wished for the Constitution to be ratified so that the United States would have a strong central government. The group of people who were happy with the ratification of the Constitution were called federalists. The group of people against the ratification of the

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