Moral and Civic Education
Moral and Civic Education
Moral and Civic Education
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Fairness
Concern for the welfare of others
Respect for diversity
Peaceful resolution of conflict
1.2. Civic virtue
Civic virtue is the traits /character that believed to be good for private as well as common
public welfares. It is the cultivation of the habit of person that claims to be important for the
success of the community/commitment to the democratic principles. Civic virtue is divided
in to two:
A. Civic disposition: it is the awareness, development and readiness of the citizen to exercise
their right and responsibility without any sort of fear and negligence. It is also seen as
characters that are deemed for the healthy functioning of society.
B. Civic commitment: it refers to the unreserved effort of citizens are required to follow for
the maintaining of the welfare of the society.
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bad. Deontologists are telling us that the morality of an action should not be measured in
terms of its consequences. Instead, actions should be weighted by themselves.
Prima Facie Duties
i. Fidelity: everybody has a duty to keep promises/ or contract, others commitment,
which they have voluntarily made.
ii. Reparation: everybody has a duty of compensation for previous wrongful acts they
have done on others.
iii. Gratitude: If others have done well to me, I owe them a debt in return.
iv. Duty of beneficence: promoting the maximum possible intrinsic good or promoting
the common good/welfare of others.
v. Non- malfeasance: the duty of refraining from doing harm.
vi. A duty of justice: everybody is expected to be fair and just in the treatment of
citizens. The duty of self-improvement- Improving oneself and one’s excellence.
Normative ethics is the study of ethical behavior and is the branch of philosophical ethics
that investigates the questions that arise regarding how one ought to act, in a moral sense.
The ultimate concern of the normative theory of obligation is to guide us in the making of
decisions and judgments about actions in particular situations.
Normative ethics Offers theories or accounts of the best way to live. These theories
evaluate actions in a systematic way, i.e., they may focus on outcomes or duties or
motivation as a means of justifying human conduct.
Normative ethics includes ethical theories or approaches such as utilitarianism,
deontology, virtue ethics, principlism, narrative ethics and feminist ethics.
Utilitarianism is a theory of morality that advocates actions that foster happiness or
pleasure and oppose actions that cause unhappiness or harm. When directed toward making
social, economic, or political decisions, a utilitarian philosophy would aim for the
betterment of society as a whole.
Principlism is a normative ethical framework designed for decision making in health care.
It is a common-morality approach relying on four mid-level principles: respect for
autonomy, nonmaleficence, beneficence, and justice.
Narrative ethics is an approach that focuses on personal identity through story, and
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particular events in the life story of the individual or community. These form a basis for
ethical reflection and learning, both for individuals or groups. In many respects it
resembles or presupposes virtue ethics.
Feminist Ethics aims “to understand, criticize, and correct” how gender operates within our
moral beliefs and practices and our methodological approaches to ethical theory.
Feminist ethics is an approach to ethics that builds on the belief that traditionally ethical
theorizing has undervalued and/or underappreciated women's moral experience, which is
largely male-dominated, and it therefore chooses to reimagine ethics through a holistic
feminist approach to transform it.
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Chapter Three:
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Deductive reasoning, if the premises are true, then the conclusion must be true. Logically
Sound Deductive Reasoning Examples: All dogs have ears; golden retrievers are dogs,
therefore they have ears. All racing cars must go over 80MPH; the Dodge Charger is a racing
car, therefore it can go over 80MPH
Inductive reasoning is a logical process in which multiple premises, all believed true or found
true most of the time, are combined to obtain a specific conclusion. Inductive reasoning is
often used in applications that involve prediction, forecasting, or behavior.
For example of inductive reasoning, if you review the population information of a city for the
past 15 years, you may observe a consistent rate of population increase. If you want to
predict what the population might be in five years, you can use the evidence or information
you have to make an estimate.
3.3. Moral judgments
Moral judgment is the evaluation of a certain behavior as good or bad, or as right or
wrong. The goal of moral psychology is to clarify why individuals make the judgments they
do about moral issues.
There are three main ways of testing a moral argument. These are Factual
accuracy, Consistency and Good will.
Factual accuracy refers to the accuracy of information or measurements are their quality of
being true or correct.
Consistency refers to the state or condition of always happening or behaving in the same
way: The team's success will depend on the consistency of its pitching.
Good will means to act out of a sense of moral obligation or “duty.” In other words, the
moral agent does a particular action not because of what it produces (its consequences) in
terms of human experience, but because the agent recognizes by reasoning that it is the
morally right thing to do and,
The Rights Approach focuses on respect for human dignity. This approach holds that our
dignity is based on our ability to choose freely how we live our lives, and that we have a
moral right to respect for our choices as free, equal, and rational people, and a moral duty to
respect others in the same way.
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These other rights can be thought of as different aspects of the basic right to be treated as we
choose. Among these rights are:
The Right to the Truth: We have a right to be told the truth and to be informed
about matters that significantly affect choices.
The Right of Privacy: We have the right to do, believe, and say whatever we choose
in our personal lives so long as we do not violate the rights of others.
The Right not to be injured: We have the right not to be harmed or injured unless we
freely and knowingly do something to deserve punishment or we freely and knowingly
choose to risk such injuries.
The Right to what is agreed: We have the right to what has been promised those with
whom we have freely entered into a contract or agreement.
3.4. Morality
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Chapter Four:
State, Government and Citizenship
4.1. Basic concept of State
The term state ‘has been used to refer to a bewildering range of things: a collection of
institutions, a territorial unit, and philosophical idea, an instrument of coercion or oppression,
and so on.
A state is a centralized political organization that imposes and enforces rules over a
population within a territory.
Functionalist approaches to the state focus on the role or purpose of state institutions.
The weakness of the functionalist view of the state, however, is that it tends to associate any
institution that maintains order (such as the family, mass media, trade unions and the
church) with the state itself.
The organizational view defines the state as the apparatus of government in its broadest
sense; that is, as that set of institutions that are recognizably public ‘in that they are
responsible for the collective organization of social existence and are funded at the public‘s
expense.
The international approach to the state views it primarily as an actor on the world stage;
indeed, as the basic unit ‘of international politics.
4.2. Theories on the origin of state
There is no common consensus among scholars concerning the foundation of state. Hence, it
is important to note the various theories on the origin of state.
i. Divine theory: according to this theory, state is a divine creation, and an institution
created by God. It assumes “rulers” as the descendants of God.
ii. Social contract theory: State is an artificial creation based on the voluntary contract
among people.
iii. Force theory: it holds the idea that state emerged through process of conquest and
coercion of the weak by the strong, i.e. war + expansion=state.
iv. Natural theory: basically, this theory believes that state is natural and gradually
evolved from family, clan, tribe, society.
v. Marxist theory: State is originated from the split of society in to social classes with a
sharp and a polarized social interest.
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5. Language policy- The constitution gave recognition to the equality of all languages and
nations, nationalities and peoples of Ethiopia
6. Separation of state and Religion
7. Guarantees Fundamental Rights and Freedoms
5.6. Defining Democracy
The word democracy is coined from two Greek words, i.e., demos (meaning people) and
kratia (meaning to govern, to rule). “Democracy” can literally be translated as Government
of the People or Government of the Majority.
5.7. Fundamental Principles and Values of Democracy
Political Participation
Liberty
Political Equality
Tolerance
Majority rule with minority rights
Free, Fair, Periodic and competitive elections
Rule of Law
Popular sovereignty
5.8. Democratic Elections
Election is a formal procedure /process by which individuals decide on “what to choose”.
The act that individuals perform while choosing among different alternatives in an
election is called voting.
The following are the Fundamental principles of democratic election:
Fair
Periodic
Free
Competitive
All inclusive
Secret ballot
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5. He/she should have the endorsement of, at least, 500 eligible voters if
he/she is nominated by the party and 1000 signatures if he/she is running
privately.
5.11. The meaning of human rights
Human rights are rights that belong to everyone as a consequence of being human.
Basic characteristics of human rights
i. Equality rights- possessed equally by all human beings.
ii. Inherent rights-derived from the innate nature of mankind.
iii. Eternal rights- As far as human society exists on earth human rights continue
to exist.
iv. . Inalienable rights-they cannot be lost.
v. Indivisible and inter related rights.
vi. Human rights are not given by government-governments role is only to
protect and safeguard human rights.
5.12. Classification of Human Rights
Referring the scope and classification of human rights it is important to note the notion
of “three generation rights” advanced by Karl Vasak.
1. First Generation Rights
First generation rights are essentially individual rights. They are commonly called civil
and political rights. They only require the state to abstain from interfering in the life of
the individual.
2. Second Generation Rights
It includes social, economic and cultural rights and finds their origin mainly in the
socialist traditions. It is the issue of socialist countries quest for an equal distribution of
resources. Second generation rights requires governments intervention to promote equal
opportunity and ensure socioeconomic and cultural rights.
3. Third Generation Rights
Third generation rights are solidarity rights based on notion of international solidarity
and relating to global structural problems rather than individual cases. The emergence of
third world nationalism and its demand for a global redistribution of power, wealth, and
other important values resulted for the development of these rights.
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