Examples of First Nation in the following topics:
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- Against opposition, the First National Bank was established to improve the nation's credit under the newly enacted Constitution.
- The debate over the National Bank also raised early questions of constitutionality in the new government.
- After reading Hamilton's defense of the National Bank Act, Washington signed the bill into law.
- The First Bank building is now a National Historic Landmark located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania within Independence National Historical Park.
- Analyze the debate surrounding the charter of the First National Bank
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- Roosevelt was deeply committed to conserving natural resources, and historians largely consider him as the nation's first conservation president.
- He worked with all the major figures of the movement, especially his chief adviser on the matter, Gifford Pinchot,putting the issue at the forefront of the national agenda.
- By the time he left office in 1908, Roosevelt set aside more federal land, national parks, and nature preserves than all of his predecessors combined.
- Forest Service, oversaw the creation of five National Parks, and signed the 1906 Antiquities Act, which established 18 new U.S. national monuments.
- He also established the first National Bird Reserves, four Game Preserves, and over 100 National Forests, including Shoshone National Forest.
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- As an economic charter, it established that the entire nation -- stretching then from Maine to Georgia, from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mississippi Valley -- was a unified, or "common," market.
- The Constitution provided that the federal government could regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the states, establish uniform bankruptcy laws, create money and regulate its value, fix standards of weights and measures, establish post offices and roads, and fix rules governing patents and copyrights.
- Alexander Hamilton, one of the nation's Founding Fathers and its first secretary of the treasury, advocated an economic development strategy in which the federal government would nurture infant industries by providing overt subsidies and imposing protective tariffs on imports.
- He also urged the federal government to create a national bank and to assume the public debts that the colonies had incurred during the Revolutionary War.
- Although early American farmers feared that a national bank would serve the rich at the expense of the poor, the first National Bank of the United States was chartered in 1791; it lasted until 1811, after which a successor bank was chartered.
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- Roosevelt was deeply committed to conserving natural resources, and historians largely consider him to be the nation's first conservation president.
- Roosevelt established the United States Forest Service, signed into law the creation of five national parks, and signed the 1906 Antiquities Act, under which he designated 18 new U.S. national monuments.
- He also established the first 51 bird reserves, 4 game preserves, and 150 national forests, including the nation's first, Shoshone National Forest.
- In 1905, his department gained control of the national forest reserves.
- Roosevelt delivered the opening address: "Conservation as a National Duty."
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- However, nationalists and, consequently, symbolic narratives of the origins and history of nation states often continue to exclude minorities from the nation state and the nation.
- First, "Which came first, the nation or the nation state?"
- For others, the nation existed first, then nationalist movements arose for sovereignty, and the nation state was created to meet that demand.
- Nation states use the state as an instrument of national unity, in economic, social, and cultural life.
- The most obvious impact of the nation state, as compared to its non-national predecessors, is the creation of a uniform national culture through state policy.
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- This is referred to as "total" incorporation, or the "nationalization" of the Bill of Rights.
- Black called for the nationalization of the first eight amendments of the Bill of Rights (Amendments 9 and 10 being patently connected to the powers of the federal government alone), and his most famous expression of this belief is found in his dissenting opinion in the Supreme Court case, Adamson v.
- The Fourteenth Amendment, depicted here, allowed for the incorporation of the First Amendment against the states.
- Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black is noted for the complete nationalization of the Bill of Rights.
- Compare and contrast the difference between nationalization and selective incorporation of the Bill of Rights.
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- The American National Election Studies (ANES) is the leading academically run national survey of voters in the United States.
- The American National Election Studies (ANES) is the leading academically-run national survey of voters in the United States, conducted before and after every presidential election.
- Its principal investigators for the first four years of the partnership were Arthur Lupia and Jon Krosnick.
- Based on one of the first comprehensive studies of election survey data (what eventually became the National Election Studies), came the conclusion that most voters cast their ballots primarily on the basis of partisan identification (which is often simply inherited from their parents), and that independent voters are actually the least involved in and attentive to politics.
- In 2006, it opened the ANES Online Commons, becoming the first large-scale academic survey to allow interested scholars and survey professionals to propose questions for future ANES surveys.
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- Romantic nationalism was a key component of Romanticism as well as certain post-Enlightenment philosophies that focused on the development of national language, folklore, and traditional customs.
- National anthems, national epics, and national treasures are part of the language of Romantic nationalism, and date back to the 18th and 19th centuries.
- In the first few decades of the 20th century, Romantic nationalism had exerted an important influence on political events.
- Some degree of art-based national pride still exists today.
- Illustrate the relationship between certain types of artwork and national pride
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- National security policies are policies related to the survival of the state.
- In order to possess national security, a nation needs to possess economic security, energy security, and environmental security, in addition to a strong military.
- Current national security concerns in the U.S. include the Drug War in Mexico, terrorism, instability in the Middle East, the national debt, and global warming, among others.
- Economic security is also a part of national security.
- First, to what extent, for the sake of national security, should individual rights and freedoms be restricted?
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- The League of Nations was created as an international organization after WWI.
- The League of Nations was an intergovernmental organization founded as a result of the Paris Peace Talks that ended the First World War.
- The League was the first permanent international organization whose principal mission was to maintain world peace.
- The countries on the map represent those that have been involved with the League of Nations.
- Explain the historical rise and fall of the League of Nations after World War I