18th and 21st Amendments: Main Idea

The 18th Amendment made it illegal to make, sell, transport, export, import, or (presumably) fold, spindle, or mutilate liquor in the United States. There's some other stuff in there too about enforcement, but the first part is the important bit.

The 21st Amendment basically said "our bad, you can do all that stuff again."

  • How did Prohibition affect the states' right argument when the feds were involved in enforcement?
  • Was it absolutely necessary to pass a Constitutional amendment prohibiting alcohol? Shouldn't amendments be saved for more important stuff, and just let the states pass laws about drinking?
  • Can the violence that followed the 18th Amendment really be blamed on the amendment? Wouldn't the gangsters have just sold something else?

Chew On This

The states should have passed their own alcohol laws and left it at that. It would have saved everyone a lot of trouble.

Prohibition was a violation of the church/state wall of separation.

Section 1. After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited. (18.1)

This is the main point of the amendment here. You'll notice this doesn't make it illegal to privately own or drink alcohol, though. That might have been struck down by the Supreme Court on the grounds of "Seriously?"

Section 2. The Congress and the several States shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation (18.2)

This idea of concurrent enforcement turned out to be a real problem. The federal enforcement efforts were never adequately funded because the Anti-Saloon League, which led the fight for the 18th, didn't want to get into a states' rights argument, particularly in the South ( source ). State and federal authorities didn't do a great job in working together. Not having a single authority in charge of enforcement turned out to be an unmanageable, ineffective mess.

Section 3. This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by the legislatures of the several States, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the States by the Congress. (18.3)

The 21st Amendment has nearly identical language in its Section 3. This means that after it's voted on by Congress, the individual states have to approve it by a two-thirds majority. It should be noted that after Prohibition was repealed, local governments would still be allowed to make liquor illegal. Dry counties and towns are still a thing.

Section 1. The eighteenth article of amendment to the Constitution of the United States is hereby repealed. (21.1)

This is totally legal because no one called "no backsies" when the 18th Amendment was passed.

Section 2. The transportation or importation into any State, Territory, or possession of the United States for delivery or use therein of intoxicating liquors, in violation of the laws thereof, is hereby prohibited. (21.2)

The point of this one was to give the power back to the states and territories. So if it was against state law to sell liquor, it still was, even though it might be legal in the state next door. Just don't try bringing booze into a dry state, or you'd be breaking the law.

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Author: Ken Drexler, Reference Specialist, Researcher and Reference Services Division​

Created: January 14, 2020

Last Updated: January 14, 2020

The 18th Amendment to the Constitution prohibited the "manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors..." and was ratified by the states on January 16, 1919. The movement to prohibit alcohol began in the United States in the early nineteenth century. On October 28, 1919, Congress passed the Volstead Act, which provided for the enforcement of the 18th Amendment. Prohibition ended on December 5, 1933, with the ratification of the 21st Amendment

  • 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (From the "Statutes at Large," 40 Stat. 1941)
  • Volstead Act (From the "Statutes at Large," 41 Stat. 305) The National Prohibition Act, known as the Volstead Act, provided enforcement for the 18th Amendment.
  • 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (From the "Statutes at Large," 48 Stat. 1749) Ratified on December 5, 1933, the 21st Amendment repealed the 18th Amendment.

thesis statement about 18th amendment

Prohibition officers raiding the lunch room of 922 Pa. Ave., Wash., D.C. April 25, 1923. National Photo Company Collection. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

thesis statement about 18th amendment

Underwood & Underwood, photographer. Putting a kick in the staid old Schuylkill here go a few barrels of beer -- not 1/2 of 1 percent -- into the Schuylkill River . Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

thesis statement about 18th amendment

New York City Deputy Police Commissioner John A. Leach, right, watching agents pour liquor into sewer following a raid during the height of prohibition . [1921?]. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

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Eighteenth Amendment

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Women casting their vote in New York City, c. 1920s. At Fifty-sixth and Lexington Avenue, the women voters showed no ignorance or trepidation, but cast their ballots in a businesslike way that bespoke study of suffrage."

Eighteenth Amendment

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thesis statement about 18th amendment

Eighteenth Amendment , amendment (1919) to the Constitution of the United States imposing the federal prohibition of alcohol .

thesis statement about 18th amendment

The Eighteenth Amendment emerged from the organized efforts of the temperance movement and Anti-Saloon League , which attributed to alcohol virtually all of society’s ills and led campaigns at the local, state, and national levels to combat its manufacture, sale, distribution, and consumption . Most of the organized efforts supporting prohibition involved religious coalitions that linked alcohol to immorality, criminality, and, with the advent of World War I , unpatriotic citizenship. The amendment passed both chambers of the U.S. Congress in December 1917 and was ratified by the requisite three-fourths of the states in January 1919. Its language called for Congress to pass enforcement legislation, and this was championed by Andrew Volstead, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, who engineered passage of the National Prohibition Act (commonly referred to as the Volstead Act ). The act was conceived by Anti-Saloon League leader Wayne Wheeler and passed over the veto of Pres. Woodrow Wilson .

thesis statement about 18th amendment

Neither the Volstead Act nor the Amendment was enforced with great success. Indeed, entire illegal economies ( bootlegging , speakeasies, and distilling operations) flourished. The public appetite for alcohol remained and was only intensified with the stock market crash of 1929 . In March 1933, shortly after taking office, Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Cullen-Harrison Act , which amended the Volstead Act, permitting the manufacturing and sale of low-alcohol beer and wines (up to 3.2 percent alcohol by volume). Nine months later, on December 5, 1933, federal prohibition was repealed with the ratification of the Twenty-first Amendment (which allowed prohibition to be maintained at the state and local levels). The Eighteenth Amendment is the only amendment to have secured ratification and later been repealed.

The full text of the Amendment is:

Section 1—After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited. Section 2—The Congress and the several States shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. Section 3—This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by the legislatures of the several States, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the States by the Congress.

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The first amendment, interpretation & debate, the eighteenth amendment, matters of debate, common interpretation, the dark side of the noble experiment, good and bad reasons for and against alcohol prohibition.

thesis statement about 18th amendment

by Robert P. George

McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University

thesis statement about 18th amendment

by David A. J. Richards

Edwin D. Webb Professor of Law at the New York University School of Law

By its terms, the Eighteenth Amendment prohibited “the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquours” but not the consumption, private possession, or production for one’s own consumption. In contrast to earlier amendments to the Constitution, the Amendment set a one-year time delay before it would be operative, and set a time limit (seven years) for its ratification by the states. Its ratification was certified on January 16, 1919, and the Amendment took effect on January 16, 1920.

To define the prohibitory terms of the Amendment, Congress passed the National Prohibition Act, better known as the Volstead Act, on October 28, 1919. The Volstead Act charged the U.S. Treasury Department with enforcement of the new restrictions, and defined which “intoxicating liquours” were forbidden and which were excluded from Prohibition (for example, alcoholic beverages used for medical and religious purposes). President Woodrow Wilson vetoed the bill, but the House of Representatives overrode the veto, and the Senate did so as well the next day. The Volstead Act set the starting date for nationwide prohibition for January 17, 1920, which was the earliest day allowed by the Eighteenth Amendment.

The Amendment was in effect for the following 13 years. It was repealed in 1933 by ratification of the Twenty-First Amendment. This was the one time in American history that a constitutional amendment was repealed in its entirety ( see discussion of the Twenty-First Amendment to the United States Constitution ).

In his important study both of the Eighteenth Amendment and its repeal, Daniel Okrent identifies the powerful political coalition that worked successfully in the two decades leading to the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment:

Five distinct, if occasionally overlapping, components made up this unspoken coalition:  racists, progressives, suffragists, populists (whose ranks included a small socialist auxiliary), and nativists. Adherents of each group may have been opposed to alcohol for its own sake, but used the Prohibition impulse to advance ideologies and causes that had little to do with it.

The Eighteenth Amendment must be understood in its historical context, namely, “between 1913 and 1919, in the greatest burst of constitutional activity since the Bill of Rights, amendments establishing the income tax, direct election of senators, Prohibition, and woman suffrage were engraved into the nation’s organic law.” The Amendment establishing the income tax (1913) removed the leading practical obstacle to Prohibition, namely, that taxes on alcohol had been a significant source of government revenues theretofore, and ending this business would eliminate taxes that had been historically important to raising revenues for the public business. With the income tax constitutionally established, Prohibition was now financially feasible, and the coalition supporting it could achieve its ends without facing this obstacle. Whether its ends were justifiable or worth the price paid for its enforcement is debated and will be discussed later ( see the Twenty-First Amendment ).

Further Reading:

Daniel Okrent, Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition (New York: Scribner, 2010). 

Richard F. Hamm, Shaping the Eighteenth Amendment (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1995).

In his important study of the passage and repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, Daniel Okrent identified the powerful political coalition that worked successfully in the two decades leading to the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment:  

[F]ive distinct, if occasionally overlapping, components made up this unspoken coalition:  racists, progressives, suffragists, populists (whose ranks included a small socialist auxiliary), and nativists. Adherents of each group may have been opposed to alcohol for its own sake, but used the Prohibition impulse to advance ideologies and causes that had little to do with it.

Racism was unashamedly blatant. According to Okrent, “it was a familiar characterization, and its reach extended beyond the boundaries of the old Confederacy. Frances Willard herself [a leading progressive advocate of temperance] had adopted the imagery, asserting that ‘the grogshot is the Negro’s center of power. Better whiskey and more of it is the rallying cry of dark faced mobs.’” Both Prohibition and the suffrage amendment had been “linked in the holy advocacy of politicians who regarded both as expressions of moral virtue” (like William Jennings Bryan), and “had become politically welded to one another, not because of moral congruence,” but because of political convenience. With the nation at war with Imperial Germany, populists and nativists joined in moral condemnation of the beer-drinking culture of German-Americans, yet another component of the coalition that carried the Amendment to ratification.

What is all too conspicuous in the coalition supporting the Eighteenth Amendment is not only blatant racism against people of color, but also a racism of ethnic hatred against German-Americans and the more recent immigrants to the United States—the so-called “hyphenated Americanism” against which Theodore Roosevelt inveighed. These groups did not share either the religion (Catholic Italian-Americans and Jews) or the drinking habits of the dominant American Protestant majority that felt increasingly at threat. In effect, the drinking habits of these Americans became a proxy for American racism and religious intolerance, in a way that echoes and anticipates what the Nixon advisor John Ehrlichman acknowledged as the basis for Nixon’s War on Crime: “We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black . . . but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt these communities.”

The Eighteenth Amendment did not, in my judgment, arise from a sober secular reflection on how to deal with the harms of alcohol abuse, which it may have aggravated, but from sectarian and highly idiosyncratic perfectionist Protestant ideals. America, a nation of immigrants, remains, as our contemporary politics shows, vulnerable to sometimes irrational fear of new immigrants of different ethnicities or religions from the dominant majority.  

America in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was at a vulnerable transitional moment away from the anti-racism of the Reconstruction Amendments to an increasingly racist culture (importantly supported both by American politicians and by the Supreme Court of the United States in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)) attracted for this reason to European models of racist imperialism to its own version of imperialism. The North and South, which had fought a civil war ultimately over slavery and the cultural racism that rationalized it, buried its enduring ethical meaning as white men found common ground in racist imperialist ventures abroad.  The suggestion that the solution to civil war in a democracy is war abroad is as old as Athena’s patriarchal advice to democratic Athens in Aeschylus’s The Oresteia :

Never pluck the heart of the battle cock And plant it in our people—intestine war seething against themselves.  Let our wars rage on abroad, with all their force, to satisfy our powerful lust for fame.  But as for the bird that fights at home—my curse on civil war.

It was this increasingly racist and imperialistic American culture that supported our entering a European war among competing European imperialisms, World War I, which most Americans of that period probably did not want to fight and which, disastrously, set the stage for the even more catastrophic World War II. Those who resisted the unpopular war (which Wilson, as a presidential candidate, had promised not to enter) had already been unjustly prosecuted in violation of what we now regard as our better traditions of free speech; the Prohibition Amendment further demonized them by racializing and indeed criminalizing their ways of life, including the role beer and wine played in their ways of life. The dominance of such fear-ridden irrationalism in support of the Eighteenth Amendment—over any secular concern with how more effectively to lower the harms from alcohol abuse—discredits its normative legitimacy.  

Daniel Okrent, L ast Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition (New York: Scribner, 2010).

Edward J. Renehan Jr., The Lion’s Pride: Theodore Roosevelt and His Family in Peace and War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998).

Stephen Kinzer, The True Flag: Theodore Roosevelt, Mark Twain, and the Birth of American Empire (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 2017).

Kristin L. Hoganson, Fighting for American Manhood: How Gender Politics Provoked the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998).

David W. Blight, Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American History (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2001).

There were good and bad—sound and unsound—reasons to favor enactment of the Eighteenth Amendment, and there were good and bad reasons to oppose it.

The good reasons to favor enactment derived from recognizing that drunkenness and alcohol addiction were responsible (as they still are today, unfortunately) for countless personal catastrophes and widespread social pathologies. These catastrophes and pathologies include, among many other things, illnesses such as cirrhosis of the liver, accidental deaths and injuries, violence (including domestic violence), unemployability and poverty, and parental and other forms of personal irresponsibility and family abandonment. Honorable supporters of alcohol prohibition hoped that a nationwide ban on the manufacture, sale, and transport of beverage alcohol would significantly reduce alcohol consumption, abuse, and addiction, resulting in fewer alcohol-related illnesses and accidents, and a reduction of alcohol-fueled violence and other social evils.

The bad and dishonorable reasons that some Americans favored the Eighteenth Amendment were rooted in racism, ethnic and religious bigotry, and nativism. These prohibitionists identified drinking and alcohol with blacks, Catholics, and immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe and, in the wake of World War I, Germans. Many of these prohibitionists hoped that enactment of the Eighteenth Amendment would make the United States less attractive and less hospitable to the kinds of people whom they deemed undesirable.

The good reasons to oppose the Eighteenth Amendment’s enactment had to do with concerns that Prohibition would fail, mainly because the law would be widely defied and difficult to enforce. Some opponents accurately predicted that Prohibition would be a boon to criminals who would handsomely profit from a black market in alcoholic beverages and deploy some of their earnings to corrupt law enforcement officials, prosecutors, and judges. Some even foresaw that lax or selective enforcement of Prohibition, together with corruption of public officials, would bring the legal system into disrepute and erode respect for the authority of law generally.

The bad reasons to oppose enactment, though few Americans of the time opposed it for these reasons, had to do with the doctrinaire libertarian belief that people have a right to drink, and even to get drunk, and that law therefore has no legitimate authority to forbid the production and sale of alcoholic beverages or other intoxicants, even for the sake of ameliorating the social ills resulting from its widespread abuse. Although, as I say, this type of libertarianism seems not to have been a major factor in debates over enactment and later repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, it has in the years since the emergence of what Robert Bellah labeled the ideology of “expressive individualism” in the late-1960s, come to play a dominant role in how many people think back on alcohol prohibition, and it certainly informs the way in which many think about substance abuse policy today.

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A Dry Dilemma: the Curious Case of America’s 18th Amendment

This essay about America’s 18th Amendment explores the tumultuous era of Prohibition in the early 20th century. It delves into the motivations behind the amendment, highlighting the clash between societal values and individual freedoms. Despite its noble intentions, Prohibition led to unintended consequences, including the flourishing of organized crime and economic hardship. The summary emphasizes the complex interplay between legislation and societal change, ultimately serving as a cautionary tale about the limitations of legislating morality.

How it works

In the colorful tapestry of American history, few threads stand out as boldly as the 18th Amendment, a legislative move that sent ripples through the fabric of society in the early 20th century. This constitutional alteration, ratified in 1919, boldly declared the prohibition of alcoholic beverages nationwide, launching what would become a tempestuous era in American life. Yet, the story of the 18th Amendment is not just one of legislative action; it is a saga of societal values, unintended consequences, and the collision of personal freedoms with communal ideals.

At its heart, the 18th Amendment was a reflection of a nation grappling with its moral compass. The temperance movement, which gained traction in the late 19th century, painted alcohol as the villain in a drama of societal decay. Advocates for Prohibition argued passionately that alcohol consumption led to a litany of social ills, from poverty to domestic violence, and that prohibition was the panacea needed to cleanse the nation’s soul. In this narrative, the 18th Amendment was the shining beacon of virtue, guiding America toward a brighter, more sober future.

Yet, like many grand endeavors, the reality of Prohibition proved far more nuanced than its proponents anticipated. Almost overnight, the illicit production and distribution of alcohol skyrocketed, fueled by the insatiable demand of a populace unwilling to relinquish its vices. Speakeasies, those hidden havens of revelry, sprang up like mushrooms after a rain, serving as bastions of resistance against the tide of temperance. Bootleggers, too, seized the opportunity, smuggling contraband liquor across state lines and into the hands of eager consumers. Despite the best efforts of law enforcement, the genie was out of the bottle, and Prohibition became a game of cat and mouse between authorities and those who flouted the law.

The unintended consequences of the 18th Amendment extended far beyond the realm of law enforcement. The closure of breweries, distilleries, and saloons dealt a crippling blow to local economies, leaving thousands without jobs and communities without vital sources of revenue. In immigrant neighborhoods, where alcohol had long been a cultural staple, Prohibition was met with confusion and resistance, further straining already taut relations with the broader society. Moreover, the black market that flourished in the wake of Prohibition gave rise to organized crime on an unprecedented scale, as gangsters like Al Capone seized control of the illicit liquor trade and wielded power with impunity.

As the 1920s gave way to the 1930s, public sentiment turned decisively against Prohibition. The excesses of the Jazz Age had given rise to a newfound sense of liberation, and many Americans chafed under the constraints of temperance. The failure of enforcement efforts, coupled with the economic hardships of the Great Depression, further eroded support for Prohibition, leading to calls for its repeal. In 1933, Congress heeded the will of the people and passed the 21st Amendment, bringing an end to the era of Prohibition and restoring to Americans the freedom to imbibe as they saw fit.

In hindsight, the story of the 18th Amendment serves as a cautionary tale about the perils of legislating morality. While Prohibition was born out of noble intentions, its implementation gave rise to a host of unintended consequences that ultimately undermined its effectiveness. The legacy of the 18th Amendment is a testament to the complexities of governance and the need for humility in the face of societal change. As we reflect on this tumultuous chapter in American history, we are reminded that the road to hell is often paved with the best of intentions.

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Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Opposition to the eighteenth amendment in the house of representatives.

Henry J. Manwell , The Graduate Center, City University of New York Follow

Date of Degree

Document type, degree name.

Liberal Studies

Thomas Kessner

Subject Categories

United States History

Prohibition, Opposition, Repeal

The Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution forbade the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages in the Nation. The National Government was to enforce Prohibition in every state of the union. Before there was consideration of the Amendment, the Temperance Movement in the United States was a constant factor in American life. From Colonial times on, there were groups promoting temperance and abstinence from alcohol.

By the beginning of the Twentieth Century two important groups had formed to promote the Temperance Movement- The Women’s Christian Temperance Union and the Anti-Saloon League. In period prior to the First World War, there developed a movement toward national Prohibition. Prior to that point Temperance groups focused on individuals abstaining from alcohol or on local communities banning its manufacture and sale.

By 1917, the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution was being debated in Congress. The Senate passed it with very little discussion, and the House of Representatives took up the matter in December, 1917. While debate was fairly short, several points were advanced that presaged the ultimate failure of the Amendment. These are its unenforceability, the lack of state control over the alcohol industry and the impossibility of legislating sober living. These points were also prominent in the ratification debates in Connecticut and Rhode Island.

The Amendment ultimately failed and was repealed in 1933. Those who have studied the process for the Amendment and its failure indicate that it failed because it was imposed by the government. The vast majority of the population did not want it. This thesis validates those points.

Examination of the votes against the Amendment showed that many congressmen cited its ultimate unenforceable nature and the lack of popular support for the Amendment as problems. These very elements were the causative factors in the Amendment’s failure. Congress was forced into passage of the Amendment by the efforts of the Anti-Saloon League which controlled a majority of the seats in the House of Representatives. However, when the opposition is studied, the majority of those opposing the Amendment were from the larger states. Thus, the smaller states ultimately forced the majority of the population into accepting bad public policy.

Recommended Citation

Manwell, Henry J., "Opposition to the Eighteenth Amendment in the House of Representatives" (2018). CUNY Academic Works. https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/2679

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Pluralism, Fundamental Rights, Regional Peace

thesis statement about 18th amendment

Conference and Research reports

Devolution: provincial autonomy and the 18th amendment.

Date: February 11, 2015

2010 marked a watershed in the structural reform of the Pakistani state. Not since 1973, when Pakistan’s constitution was framed, had such a significant and wide ranging institutional restructuring been undertaken by a democratically elected parliament. Faced with the challenge of ensuring democratic transition after a decade of military rule, political parties in Pakistan, led by the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and its coalition allies, reset the concept and the implementation of federalism through the passage of the 18th Amendment.

From realising provincial autonomy to restricting presidential powers; from re-envisioning judicial appointments to selection of an election commission – the amendment cut across party lines in an attempt to address the challenges impeding democratic sustainability in Pakistan. Calling on more than three decades of experience with political wrangling, provincial grievances, and military rule, the amendment aimed to address some of Pakistan’s structural dichotomies as the country charted a new, more democratic future for itself.

The Role of 18th Amendment in Democracy of Pakistan

  • Ruqia Abdul Majeed Teacher
  • Dr. Shabana Akhtar Assistant Professor

After the 2008 elections, an elected democratic government gave Pakistan another chance to consolidate its fragile democracy. The years (2008- 2018) have seen significant constitutional amendments with far-reaching effects A total of eight constitutional amendments have been made in 2008 and 2018, including the eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-first, twentieth, third, twenty-fourth and twenty-fifth. All these constitutional amendments played a role in restoring the parliamentary structure of the 1973 constitution. The 8th and 17th Amendments to the Constitution were introduced during the military rule, most of which were unanimously repealed by Parliament. The most significant and historic achievements of the amendment between 2008 and 2018 were the empowerment of the provinces, the empowerment of the legislative branch, the creation of an independent election commission, the establishment of caretaker governments, and the military to combat terrorism. The establishment of courts was to allow delimitation inclusion of constituencies and Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa before the 2018 general elections. The constitutional amendments in constitution, 1973 of Pakistan, specially, the 18th constitutional amendment has played big role for democratization during 2008-2018 in Pakistan which has strengthened democracy and paved the way for the supremacy of the parliament at same time. Democracy is a system of government that supports the broad participation of the people in government and also promotes the views of citizens to smooth society. Democracy is the government of the people. The system of democracy is the one of the best democracies in the word. The people of Pakistan are not unawareness about the system of democracy in Pakistan. In the constitutional history of Pakistan, there have been many civilian and military dictators who have refused to work under the constitution and run their own governments because parliament is the basic institution of democracy. Parliamentary democracy in Pakistan has collapsed four times. The political aspirations of the military generals the various constitutional models and the ThirdAmendment to the 1973 Constitution (8th and 17th) distorted parliamentary democracy by denying parliamentary autonomy and the rights of the people. After the transfer of power from the military to civilian rule in 2008, it strengthened parliamentary democracy, provincial autonomy, and the judiciary, and the role of democracy in ensuring the independence of the Election Commission and a solid state. After coming to power under the PPP, the government restored the parliamentary spirit of the Constitution through the 18th Amendment. After days of deliberation and consensus by a committee representing all parties of Pakistan in Parliament, the 18th Amendment has cleared the Constitution by removing undemocratic additions and deletions. 

Akram Mehmish ‗‘Understanding the concept of Democracy in Pakistan

‗‘ P1-3 Published on November 26, 2017. Published in

'‘ https://moderndiplomacy.eu/2017/11/26/understanding-theconcept-democracy –in-Pakistan /‘‘

Arshad, Javed Rizvi ‗‘ Democracy of Pakistan Root Causes of weak

demarcation system in Pakistan‘‘ published in Sir Syed University

of Engineering and Technology.

Dayo Abdullah ‗‘ Decade of Democracy of Pakistan‘‘ published on

December 2018, P 3-9.

Haroon ‗‘ Key Eighteenth Amendment Proposals ‗‘ in April 2, 2010

published in BBCUrdu.com, Islamabad P1.

Hussain Karamat Nazi ‗‘the constitution Islamic republic of Pakistan ‗‘

Published on 28th February 2012. P142.

Inayatullah, Sarah Inayatullah and Sohail '' The futures democracy of

Pakistan ‗‘ on (December 1997 published in

(The_futures_of_democracy_in_Pakistan_A_liberal_perspective).

James Anjam paul ‗‘The constitution of Pakistan ‗‘ October2014

publisher: Pakistan Minorities Teachers ‗‘ Association P 1-2

Mamoon Dawood ‗‘ A Brief History of Pakistan‘s Democratic Journey

(2008-2018)‘‘ on November 2018 published in

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/329153586 .

Mehboob Bilal Ahmed ‗‘two faces of Democracy ‗‘ on 12 April 2019.

(Ahmed Bilal April 12, 2019 p 1) published in Dawn newspaper.

Subhan Fazli ‗‘ 18th Amendment Provincial Autonomy: Challenges for

Political parties ‗‘ on January 2018 published in Baluchistan

study center university of Baluchistan Quetta .

Waqas M, Muquddas , Khattak ‗‘ Democracy in Pakistan: problems and

prospects in making informed choices ‗‘ on January 2017 p1

published in international journal of Social Sciences Management

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  1. (DOC) Critical analysis of 18th amendment

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  3. The 18th Amendment by Reagan Rowe

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  4. Eighteenth Amendment by arianagreen

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  5. The Equal Rights Amendment

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  6. 10 Facts About the Eighteenth Amendment

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COMMENTS

  1. 18th and 21st Amendments: Theme of States' Rights

    Check out some potential thesis statements about 18th and 21st Amendments. The 21st Amendment showed that the Constitution is a living document that can change over time. From the fact that there have been only 27 Amendments since 1789, and ten of them were written about two minutes after the Constitution was ratified, it's clear that the ...

  2. 18th and 21st Amendments: Theme of Choice

    The 18th Amendment is all about choice, or more to the point, the lack of one. Once the law went into effect, the American people were abdicating their ability to drink. ... Check out some potential thesis statements about 18th and 21st Amendments. The epic failure of the 18th Amendment is proof that prohibition doesn't work. Time to legalize ...

  3. 18th and 21st Amendments: Main Idea

    The 18th Amendment made it illegal to make, sell, transport, export, import, or (presumably) fold, spindle, or mutilate liquor in the United States. There's some other stuff in there too about enforcement, but the first part is the important bit. The 21st Amendment basically said "our bad, you can do all that stuff again."

  4. Introduction

    The 18th Amendment to the Constitution prohibited the "manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors..." and was ratified by the states on January 16, 1919. The movement to prohibit alcohol began in the United States in the early nineteenth century. On October 28, 1919, Congress passed the Volstead Act, which provided for the ...

  5. Proposal and Ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment

    For more on the history of the Hobson Amendment and the evolution of the Eighteenth Amendment 's enforcement provisions, see Richard F. Hamm, Shaping the Eighteenth Amendment Temperance Reform, Legal Culture, and the Polity, 1880-1920 (Studies in Legal History) 228-35 (1995). Jump to essay-5 Lender & Martin, supra 1, at 129.

  6. Amdt18.6 The Eighteenth Amendment and the Supreme Court

    Footnotes Jump to essay-1 See Intro.3.5 Early Twentieth Century Amendment s (Sixteenth Through Twenty-Second Amendment s). See also Druggan v. Anderson, 269 U.S. 36, 38-39 (1925) (determining that Congress possessed the power to enact the Volstead Act after the states had ratified the Eighteenth Amendment, even though the Amendment had not yet become effective).

  7. Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution

    The Eighteenth Amendment was the result of decades of effort by the temperance movement in the United States and at the time was generally considered a progressive amendment. [1] Founded in 1893 in Saratoga, New York, the Anti-Saloon League (ASL) started in 1906 a campaign to ban the sale of alcohol at the state level. Their speeches, advertisements, and public demonstrations claimed that ...

  8. Eighteenth Amendment

    The Eighteenth Amendment emerged from the organized efforts of the temperance movement and Anti-Saloon League, which attributed to alcohol virtually all of society's ills and led campaigns at the local, state, and national levels to combat its manufacture, sale, distribution, and consumption.Most of the organized efforts supporting prohibition involved religious coalitions that linked ...

  9. The Eighteenth Amendment and Prohibition

    The Eighteenth Amendment was the product of nationwide temperance movements that first emerged in the decades after the Founding and steadily grew in influence during the Progressive Era. 6 Footnote See Amdt18.2.2 Temperance Movements of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. The Progressive Era, which lasted from the 1890s to the 1920s, was a ...

  10. Interpretation: The Eighteenth Amendment

    The Eighteenth Amendment must be understood in its historical context, namely, "between 1913 and 1919, in the greatest burst of constitutional activity since the Bill of Rights, amendments establishing the income tax, direct election of senators, Prohibition, and woman suffrage were engraved into the nation's organic law.".

  11. The 18th Amendment Simplified: Impact and Legacy of Prohibition in the

    In the annals of American history, few epochs loom as large or provoke as much intrigue as the Prohibition era sparked by the 18th Amendment. Enacted in 1920, this constitutional amendment set the stage for a bold experiment in temperance, outlawing the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages nationwide.

  12. Pros and Cons of the 18th Amendment

    Essay Example: The 18th Amendment to the United States Constitution, etched into law in 1919, heralded an epoch of Prohibition, forging a new path fraught with both promise and peril. This constitutional edict outlawed the production, sale, and transportation of alcoholic libations across the ... Thesis Statement Generator .

  13. A Dry Dilemma: the Curious Case of America's 18th Amendment

    Essay Example: In the colorful tapestry of American history, few threads stand out as boldly as the 18th Amendment, a legislative move that sent ripples through the fabric of society in the early 20th century. This constitutional alteration, ratified in 1919, boldly declared the prohibition ... Thesis Statement Generator . Generate thesis ...

  14. eighteenth amendment Essay

    The 18th amendment was ratified by congress on January 16, 1919 in which the selling and distribution of "intoxicating liquors" was banned. That was the start of what many called the dry decade in the United States. Norman H. Clark's Deliver Us from Evil: An Interpretation of American Prohibition illustrates the struggles to make the dry ...

  15. PDF AP United States History

    Question 3. Evaluate the extent to which the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which guaranteed women the right to vote, marked a turning point in United States women's history. In the development of your argument, explain what changed and what stayed the same from the period immediately before the ratification of ...

  16. "Opposition to the Eighteenth Amendment in the House of Representatives

    The Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution forbade the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages in the Nation. The National Government was to enforce Prohibition in every state of the union. Before there was consideration of the Amendment, the Temperance Movement in the United States was a constant factor in American life. From Colonial times on, there were groups promoting ...

  17. PDF Materials

    Thesis Statement Examples (112 words) During WWI, W.H.R. Rivers served in the British Expeditionary Force as a ... Congress passed the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Though the "Prohibition Amendment" and Volstead Act of 1919 succeeded in banning the import, export, transport and sale of alcohol in the U.S., they ...

  18. U.S. Constitution

    Eighteenth Amendment Eighteenth Amendment Explained. After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby ...

  19. Thesis Statement on Eighteenth Amendment. Reason, analysis, and the

    Download thesis statement on Eighteenth Amendment. Reason, analysis, and the cause of the Ammendment. in our database or order an original thesis paper that will be written by one of our staff writers and delivered according to the deadline. ... Eighteenth Amendment It all began on board ships that were bringing the first Europeans to America ...

  20. PDF IMPACT OF THE EIGHTEENTH CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT ON ...

    Impact of the Eighteenth Constitution Amendment The Eighteenth Amendment was the largest, unique, landmark and the most comprehensive reform package after the passage of the legal history of 1973 constitution. It was passed all the way with support from all political parties in the Parliament.

  21. Devolution: Provincial Autonomy and the 18th Amendment

    Devolution: Provincial Autonomy and the 18th Amendment. Date: February 11, 2015. 2010 marked a watershed in the structural reform of the Pakistani state. Not since 1973, when Pakistan's constitution was framed, had such a significant and wide ranging institutional restructuring been undertaken by a democratically elected parliament.

  22. Explain how a historian would pursue further study of the thesis

    Explain how a historian would pursue further study of the thesis statement, "In an admirable attempt to do good for society, the signing of the 18th Amendment instead, played a significant role in the rise of organized crime and provided a lucrative black market for alcohol, empowered criminal networks, and led to the consolidation of power among notorious gangsters, who capitalized on the ...

  23. The Role of 18th Amendment in Democracy of Pakistan

    1973 of Pakistan, specially, the 18th. constitutional amendment has. played big role for democratization during 2008-2018 in Pakistan. which has strengthened democracy and paved the way for the supremacy. of the parliament at same time. Democracy is a system of government that. supports the broad participation of the people in government and also.