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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which examines why the Articles of
Confederation gave way to the Constitution of the United States. Bibliography lists 3
sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAartcon.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Articles of Confederation. These articles, which were similar to what we know as amendments, were dissolved for many reasons, not the least of which involved the fact that they would
not have proven broad enough or perhaps flexible enough for the new nation. The following paper examines why the Articles of Confederation were dissolved and replaced with the Constitution of
the United States. The Articles of Confederation "After the ratification of the Declaration of Independence, with its references to united colonies, the Continental Congress set to work on
the task of drawing up a document that would provide a legal framework for that union, and would be enforceable as the law of the new land" (The Articles of
Confederation, 2003). That was the Articles of Confederation. And, it was these articles that made up our first Constitution. Sometimes these articles have been referred to as the "Articles of
Confusion" (About The Articles of Confederation, 2003). In these articles it is evident that the plan was laid out that possessed the principles of the time as they involved the
American Revolutionary War. but, because they were created or drafted with revolutionary thoughts in mind it "contained crucial weaknesses. It had no power of national taxation, no power to control
trade, and it provided for a comparatively weak executive" (About The Articles of Confederation, 2003). As a result of these realities, it found that it had no power to
enforce any kind of legislation. "It was a league of friendship that was based upon the concept of a confederation which was opposed to any type of national authority" (About
The Articles of Confederation, 2003). We also note that one of the most powerful weaknesses, if not the greatest weakness, was the fact that the Articles of Confederation did not
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