Chapter 3: The Federal System. Jordan Porter Flashcards

1
Q

Confederation

A

Type of government in which the national government derives its powers from the state; a league of independent states.

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2
Q

Iroquois Confederacy

A

A political alliance of American Indian tribes established in the 17th century that featured aspects of the federal system of government adapted by the framers.

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3
Q

Monarchy

A

A form of government in which power is vested in hereditary kings and queens who govern the entire society.

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4
Q

Oligarchy

A

A form of government in which the right to participate depends on the possession of wealth, social status, military positions, or achievement.

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5
Q

Totalitarianism

A

A form of government in which power resides in leaders who rule by force in their own self-interest and without regard to rights and liberties

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6
Q

Democracy

A

A system of government that gives power to the people, whether directly or through elected representatives

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7
Q

Federal System

A

System of government in which the national government and state governments share power and derive all authority from the people

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8
Q

Unitary System

A

System of government in which the local and regional governments derive all authority from a strong national government.

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9
Q

Enumerated Powers

A

The powers of the national government specifically granted to Congress in Article one section eight of the constitution.

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10
Q

Implied Powers

A

The powers if the national government derived from the enumerated powers and the necessary and proper clause

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11
Q

10th Amendment

A

The final part of the Bill of Rights that defines the basic principles of American federalism in stating that the powers not delegated to the national government are reserved to the states or the people.

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12
Q

Reserved Powers

A

Powers reserved to the states by the 10th Amendment that lie at the foundation of the states right to legislate for the public health and welfare if its citizens.

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13
Q

Concurrent powers

A

Powers shared by the national and state governments.

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14
Q

Bill of attainder

A

A law declaring an act illegal without a judicial trial

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15
Q

ex post facto law

A

Law that makes an act punishable as a crime, even if the action was legal at the time it was committed.

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16
Q

Full faith and credit clause

A

Section of Article four of the constitution that ensures judicial decrees and contracts made in one state will be binding and enforceable in any other state

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17
Q

Privileges and immunities clause

A

Part of article four of the constitution guaranteeing that the citizens of each state are afforded the same rights as citizens of all other states

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18
Q

Extradition Clause

A

Part four of the constitution that requires states to extradite, or return, criminals to states where they have been convicted or are to stand trail.

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19
Q

Interstate Compacts

A

Contracts between states that carry the force of law; generally now used as a tool to address multi state policy concerns

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20
Q

Dillion´s Rule

A

A premise articulated by Judge John F Dillion in 1868 which states that local governments do not have any inherent sovereignty and instead must be authorized b state government that can create or abolish them

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21
Q

Charter

A

A document that, like a constitution,specifies the basic policies, procedures, and institutions of local government. Charters for local governments must be approved by state legislature.

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22
Q

Counties

A

The basic administrative units of local government.

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23
Q

Municipalities

A

City governments created in response to the emergence of relatively densely populated areas.

24
Q

Special Districts

A

A local government that is restricted to a particular function.

25
John Marshall
The longest-serving Supreme Court Chief Justice, Marshall, Marshall served from 1801 to 1835. Marshall's decision in Marbury v Madison established the principle of Judicial review in the United States
26
McCulloch v Maryland
The Supreme Court upheld the power if the national government and denied the right of a state to tax the federal bank, using the constitutions supremacy clause. . The courts broad interpretation of the necessary and proper clause paved the way for later rulings upholding expansive federal powers
27
Gibbons v Ogden
The Supreme Court upheld broad congressional power to regulate interstate commerce. The Courts broad interpretation of the constitutions commerce clause paved the way for later rulings upholding expansive federal powers.
28
Barron v Baltimore
Supreme Court ruling that, before the Civil War, limited the applicability of the Bill of Rights to the federal government and not to the states
29
Roger B Taney
Supreme Court Chief Justice who served from 1835-1864. Taney supported slavery and states rights in pre-Civil War era.
30
Dual Federalism
The belief that having a separate and equally powerful levels of government is the best arrangement often referred to as layer-cake federalism
31
Nullification
The belief in the right of a state to declare void a federal law.
32
John C Calhoun
A politician and political theorist from South Carolina who supported slavery and states rights in the pre-civil War era and served as vice president from 1825 to 1832
33
Dred Scott v Stanford
A supreme court decision that ruled the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional and denied citizenship rights to enslaved African Americans. Dred Scott heightened tensions between the pro slavery South and the abolitionist North in the run up to the Civil War
34
Civil War
The military conflict form 1861 to 1865 in the United States between the Northern forces of the Union and the Southern forces of the Confederacy. Over 600,000 Americans lost their lives during this war.
35
Abraham Lincoln
16th president of the United States, the first elected Republican president, who served from 1861-1865. Lincoln who led the Union during the Civil War, was assassinated in 1865 by a confederate sympathizer, John Wilkes Booth
36
Secession
A unilateral assertion of independence by a geographic region within the a country. The eleven Southern states making up the confederacy during the Civil War seceded from the United States.
37
Confederate States of America
The political system created by the eleven states that seceded from the Union during the Civil War, which ceased to exist upon the Union Victory.
38
Reconstruction
The period from 1865-1877 after the Civil War, in which the U.S. military occupied and dominated the eleven former states of the Confederacy
39
Andrew Johnson
17th president of the united states, a Republican, who served from 1865 to 1869. Johnson had served as Abraham Lincolns vice president and became president after Lincolns assassination.
40
16th Amendment
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that authorized Congress to enact a national income tax.
41
17th Amendment
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that made senators directly elected by the people, removing their selection by state legislature
42
Calvin Coolidge
13th president of the United States, a Republican, who serve from 1923 to 1929.
43
Herbert Hoover
31st president of the United States, a Republican, who served from 1929 to 1933 during the start of the Great Depression.
44
Franklin D Roosevelt
32nd president, a Democrat, who served from 1933 to 1945. FDRs leadership took the United States through the Great Depression and World War ll
45
New Deal
The name given to the program of "Relief, Recovery, and Reform" begun by President Franklin D Roosevelt in 1933 to bring the United States out of the Great Depression
46
Cooperative Federalism
The intertwined relationship between national, state, and local governments that began with the New Deal: Often referred to as a marble- cake federalism
47
Progressive Federalism
A pragmatic to federalism that views relations between national and state governments as both coercive and cooperative.
48
Barack Obama
The 1st African American president of the United States, a Democrat, who served as forty-fourth president from 2009 to 2017. Senator from Illinois from 2005 to 2008: Member of the Illinois Senate from 1997 to 2004.
49
Categorical Grants
Grants that appropriate federal funds to states for a specific purpose.
50
Lyndon B Johnson
36th president of the United States, a democrat, who served from 1964 to 1969. LBJ led the nation during the Civil Rights era and the Vietnam War.
51
Great Society
Reform program begun in 1964 by President Lyndon B Johnson that was a broad attempt to combat poverty and discrimination through urban renewal, education reform, and unemployment.
52
Ronald Reagan
40th president of the United States, a Republican led the nation through the end of the cold war and his leadership led to a national shift toward political conservation.
53
New Federalism
Federal-state relationship proposed by the Reagan administration during the 1980's: hallmark is returning administrative powers to the state government.
54
Block Grant
A large grant given to a state by the federal government with only general spending guidelines
55
Programmatic request
Federal Funds designated for special projects within a state or congressional district; also called earmarks.