Many of the statements in this declaration deal with changes in the law. For one, statement number five states the need for improved laws in dealing all crimes, and the need to take precautions so that the law isn’t abbused wrongfully. Secondly, statement number 7 states that “No man may be indicted, arrested or detained, accept in cases determined by the law and according to the forms which it has prescribed.” Thirdly, number nine is very important because it states that all men shall be presumed innocent until proven guilty, without this statement many more people would have been punished for …show more content…
France, on the other hand only wanted to redefine their government. Secondly, America’s declaration only stated that they were going to build their own separate government. France’s declaration actually states what specific changes they wish to make. Lastly, America’s declaration focused more on freedom and independence, whereas France’s declaration leaned more towards equality and fairness. 3.In what ways were the ideas of Olympe de Gouges’ Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen ahead of their time? p 613-14 text)
Olympe de Gouges was a french feminist whose ideas were ahead of their time because it was over a hundred years later when her ideas actually became a reality. Among her ideas, Olympe believed that all women should have the right to vote, the right to divorce her husband in abuse cases, and the right to own property and have custody over her own children. 4. Compare this declaration with the “Declaration of the Rights of Man ( see lecture notes) in” in terms of its content and goals. What are the differences, if any? Would de Gouges’s ideas be accepted today? Why and