Maintaining Order Ans- Preserving life and protecting property, establishing basic order
Providing public goods Ans- benefits and services available to everyone, such as
education, sanitation, and parks
promoting equa
...
Maintaining Order Ans- Preserving life and protecting property, establishing basic order
Providing public goods Ans- benefits and services available to everyone, such as
education, sanitation, and parks
promoting equality Ans- Ensuring individuals or groups are not treated differently on the
basis of their specific protected characteristics
Liberalism according to John Locke Ans- The belief that states should leave individuals
free to follow their individual pursuits
What is the purpose of government according to john lockes philosophy of liberalism
Ans- the protection of life, liberty, and property
what three values are considered to be foundational to american government Ansfreedom, order and equality
political equiality Ans- equality in political decision making, one vote per person with all
votes counted equally
Social equality Ans- equality in wealth, education, and status
How does the US constitution guarantee political equality Ans- prohibits titles of nobility
and does not make owning property a requirement for holding public office
the original dilemma Ans- freedom vs order
example of original dilemma Ans- mandatory testing for HIV/AIDS
Modern dilemma Ans- Freedom vs. Equality
example of freedom vs equality Ans- mandating that buses and trains are accessible to
people with disabilties
political ideology Ans- a consistent set of values and beliefs about the proper purpose
and scope of government
Totalitarianism Ans- belief that government should have unlimited power
anarchism Ans- opposes government in any form
Capitalism Ans- supports free enterprise
Socialism Ans- central government plays strong role in regulating existing private
industry and directing the economy
What kind of economic system would libertarians support Ans- Laissez Faire
Direct democracy Ans- rank-and file citizen rule themselves rather than electing
representatives to govern on their behalf
Indirect Democracy Ans- system of government where citizen elect public officials to
govern on their behalf
Social contract theory Ans- people agree to set up rulers for certain purposes and thus
have the right to resist or remove rulers who act against these purposes
Republic Ans- A government without a monarch; a government rooted in the consent of
the governed, whose power is exercised by elected representatives responsible to the
governed
Under a confederation who has more power? (states or national governemnt?) AnsState government
What powers did the states have under the article of confederation Ans- retain their
sovereignty, which means that each has supreme power within it's boarders. The
central government is weak, can only coordinate not control
Major weakness of the articles of confederation Ans- 1. No ability to tax
2. No leadership position to direct the government
3. Did not allow the national government to regulate interstate and foreign commerce
4. could not be amended without the unaimous agreement of the congress
Shay's rebellion Ans- demonstrated the weakness of the articles of confederation
Virgina Plan Ans- Separation of government into three branches, division of the
legislature into two houses and proportional representation in the legislature
New Jersey Plan Ans- Single chamber legislature have the power to raise revenue and
regulate commerce.
Great Compromise Ans- House according to population, States represented equally
The 4 elements of the preamble Ans- 1. Creates a people
2. explains the reason for the constitution
3. Articulates goals
4. Fashions a government
4 basic princples of the US constitution Ans- 1. republicanism
2. federalism
3. separation of powers
4. checks and balances
Checks and balances Ans- gives each branch of the government some scrutiny of and
control over the other branches to prevent the exclusive exercise of certain powers by
any one of the three branches
Supremacy clause Ans- In article 6 of the constitution that asserts that national laws
take precedence over state laws when they conflict
Enumerate powers Ans- the powers specifically granted to congress by the constitution
Necessary and Proper Clause Ans- the last clause in section 8 of article I, which gives
congress the means to execute the enumerate powers this is also called the elastic
clause
Article I Ans- What congress can and cant do and the qualifications of congress
Article II Ans- What the president can and can't do and the qualifications for presidency
Article III Ans- what the courts can/can't do, qualifications for supreme and smaller
courts
Article IV Ans- The people live under both national and state governments, the states
have power to both independently and shared with the national government
Article V Ans- process to change (amend) the constitution
Article VI Ans- how and why the constitution rules
Article VII Ans- ratification- how constitution was approved
Federalists Ans- proponents of the new charter, and they wanted a strong national
government
Anti-Federalists Ans- opponents of the constitution and they wanted to protect the
states from tyranny of a strong national government
Federalist paper #10 Ans- Written by James Madison, stated proposed government was
not likely to be dominated by any faction, and that they key to mending evils of factions
is to have a large republic. the larger the better.
Federalist paper #51 Ans- James Madison, Argued that the separation of powers and
checks and balances would control efforts of tyranny.
Ratification of US constitution Ans- ratified by 9 states, officially took effect after bill of
rights were added as amendments
The chief obstacle to ratification of the Constitution by the states was Ans- omission of a
bill of rights
How long did it take for bill of rights to be ratified Ans- 3 years passed in 1791
Federalism Ans- division of powers between central and regional governemnts
Dual Federalism Ans- the constitution is a compact among sovereign states, so that the
powers of government and the states are clearly differentiated
Cooperative Federalism Ans- constitution is an agreement among people who are
citizens of both state and nation, so there is much overlap between state power and
national powers
McCulloch v. Maryland Ans- Maryland was trying to tax the national bank and Supreme
Court ruled that federal law was stronger than the state law
Commerce Clause Ans- a provision of the US constitution that grants congress the
ability to regulate commerce relationships between foreign countries, states, and indian
tribes
Interstate Commerce Ans- trades between states are regulated by federal government
as stated in article 1 of the constitution
Grants in aid Ans- an amount of money given to a local government, an institution, or a
particular scholar.
mandates Ans- a requirement that a state undertake an activity or provide a service, in
keeping with minimum national standards
preemption Ans- The power of Congress to enact laws by which the national
government assumes total or partial responsibility for a state government function.
Majoritarianism Ans- Government should do what the majority of the people want
Pluralism Ans- public does not demonstrate clear, consistent opinions, and that the
government should instead listen to interest groups
political socialization Ans- complex process in which people acquire their political values
Primary Structuring Ans- what is learned first is learned best
Structuring principle Ans- What is learned first structures learning later
3 key agents of political socilization Ans- 1. Family
2. School
3. Community/peers
party identification Ans- often learned by parents
all minority groups are______likely that whites to support government action to improve
economic opportunity Ans- more likely
Minority groups tend to favor Ans- Equality over freedom and freedom over order
Gatekeepers Ans- decide which events to report and how to handle the elements in
those stories
horse race journalism Ans- focus on who is ahead
watch dog journalism Ans- journalism that scrutinizes public and business institutions
and publicizes perceived misconduct
Conventional participation Ans- relatively routine political behavior that uses institutional
channels and is acceptable to the dominant culture, voting writer letters
unconventional participation Ans- relatively uncommon behavior that challenges or
defies established institutions or dominate culture (riots, linking arms to prevent
entrance, in your face)
Less risky participation Ans- conventional
african american's right to vote Ans- 15th Amendment
Women's right to vote Ans- 19th amendment
Lowered voting age to 18 Ans- 26th Amendment
structuring the vote choice Ans- The idea of reducing the number of candidates on the
ballot to those who have a realistic chance of winning
12th amendment Ans- provided the separate ballots are used for president and vice
president, more rules for electing a president.
Electoral votes required to win the presidency Ans- 270
interest group Ans- organized body of individuals who share some political goals and try
to influence public policy decisions
Agenda building Ans- the process by which new issues are brought into the political
limelight
program monitoring Ans- keeping track of government programs, usually done by
interest groups
Redistricting Ans- divide or organize an area into new political or school districts
Reapportionment Ans- redistribution of representation in a legislative body, according to
changes in census
Gerrymandering Ans- manipulated the boundaries of an electoral constituency so a to
favor one party or class
Formal powers of the president Ans- 1. serve as administrative head of the nation
2. act as commander in chief of the military
3. Veto legislation
4. appoint various officals
5. make treaties
Executive order Ans- a rule or order issued by the president to an executive branch of
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