No they are not the same. The Articles of Confederation didn't provide the power for the government to collect taxes, for example.
No, they "were" not the same*
*Different author from the first paragraph.
No the Articles in the Constitution are not the same as the articles of confederation, because the Constitution have the federal government more power.
NO
the articles of confederation and the constitution are both the same because they both are written and the difference is that they tell different things. and i dont know but i just wanted to do something so i took a long shot at it
· They were established by the same people· Both were the official government of the United States· Both were the laws of the United States government· Both called the nation the United States of America
The Articles of Confederation were a set of rules for the new born American colonies to abide by. However the Articles lacked stability, court systems, laws, and a central government. This led to the creation of the U.S. constitution that took the place of the articles and later added to bill of rights. == == Loosely bound the states together
no because have different jobs that they work with
I'm doing the same paper :P
VERY different. The Articles of Confederation was the agreements among 13 independent States' the Constitution bound those states into a new nation.
the articles of confederation and the constitution are both the same because they both are written and the difference is that they tell different things. and i dont know but i just wanted to do something so i took a long shot at it
· They were established by the same people· Both were the official government of the United States· Both were the laws of the United States government· Both called the nation the United States of America
· They were established by the same people· Both were the official government of the United States· Both were the laws of the United States government· Both called the nation the United States of America
The Articles of Confederation were a set of rules for the new born American colonies to abide by. However the Articles lacked stability, court systems, laws, and a central government. This led to the creation of the U.S. constitution that took the place of the articles and later added to bill of rights. == == Loosely bound the states together
The constitution was a document that was written to replace the articles of confederation but at the same time they had to add three branches to check on each others power so there could be no tyranny.
no because have different jobs that they work with
I'm doing the same paper :P
No - they are NOT the same document.The "Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union" served as the first constitution of the USA. They were A constitution but not THE CONSTITUTION. The Articles were drafted between 1776-77 and became the working constitution during the Revolutionary war and served as the charter for the new nation for several years thereafter, although ratification was not completed until 1781. It soon became evident that the powers granted to the central government were still too weak to effectively conduct business with other nations on behalf of the new nation, nor did the government have adequate means to resolve disputes between different states.As a result, representatives of the extant states gathered to start discussing revisions to the Articles - and eventually concluded that a whole new document was needed. The Constitutional Convention was convened in Philadelphia in 1787 and hammered out the details and compromises necessary and the new Constitution was adopted on September 17, 1787 and sent to the various states for ratification. Upon ratification and the formation of the new government under the terms of the Constitution, the Articles of Confederation became null and void.
No - they are NOT the same document.The "Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union" served as the first constitution of the USA. They were A constitution but not THE CONSTITUTION. The Articles were drafted between 1776-77 and became the working constitution during the Revolutionary war and served as the charter for the new nation for several years thereafter, although ratification was not completed until 1781. It soon became evident that the powers granted to the central government were still too weak to effectively conduct business with other nations on behalf of the new nation, nor did the government have adequate means to resolve disputes between different states.As a result, representatives of the extant states gathered to start discussing revisions to the Articles - and eventually concluded that a whole new document was needed. The Constitutional Convention was convened in Philadelphia in 1787 and hammered out the details and compromises necessary and the new Constitution was adopted on September 17, 1787 and sent to the various states for ratification. Upon ratification and the formation of the new government under the terms of the Constitution, the Articles of Confederation became null and void.
The Articles of Confederation were written before the Constitution was written, they contained very little that is still used today. The constitution however is a more modern version that is still practiced and even though over the years it has gained twenty-two amendments only ten or twelve of them are real amendments there are several that canceled each other out. The problem with the Articles of confederation is the way people were represented and everyone was 50/50 about almost everything in the Articles. Half of the people thought half of the laws were wrong and the same with the other half. In newspapers, articles are the pieces of journalism that report the events of the day or the author's opinions. In the English language, article refers to the words "a," "an," and "the." "The" is the definite article, because it denotes a specific thing, and "a" and "an" are called indefinite articles because they do not denote specific things.
The Constitution was different from the Articles of Confederation in many ways. The Constitution gave our federal government more power, so it could sufficiently run. Under the Articles of Confederation our government was uni-cameral; the Constitution changed it to bi-cameral (House of Representatives and Senate). The US Constitution also created a court system which was previously not existing in the Articles of Confederation. Our constitution has enable to protect the rights of the citizens.