TEKS: Chapter 113. Social Studies See All Teacher Resources

113.42.c.22

(22) Citizenship. The student understands the historical development of significant legal and political concepts related to the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. The student is expected to:

  • (A) summarize the development of the rule of law from ancient to modern times;
  • (B) identify the influence of ideas regarding the right to a "trial by a jury of your peers" and the concepts of "innocent until proven guilty" and "equality before the law" that originated from the Judeo-Christian legal tradition and in Greece and Rome;
  • (C) identify examples of politically motivated mass murders in Cambodia, China, Latin America, the Soviet Union, and Armenia;
  • (D) identify examples of genocide, including the Holocaust and genocide in the Balkans, Rwanda, and Darfur;
  • (E) identify examples of individuals who led resistance to political oppression such as Nelson Mandela, Mohandas Gandhi, Oscar Romero, Natan Sharansky, Las Madres de la Plaza de Mayo, and Chinese student protestors in Tiananmen Square; and
  • (F) assess the degree to which American ideals have advanced human rights and democratic ideas throughout the world.