Judicial Branch Buzzwords

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Judicial Review

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19 Terms

1

Judicial Review

created by Marbury v. Madison, it says that the federal judiciary can analyze government actions to determine if those actions are constitutional or not

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2

Life Tenure

federal judges cannot be fired once they have been appointed by the president and confirmed/approved by the Senate; they serve for life, but they can be impeached

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3

Precedent

a judicial ruling that served as the basis for rulings in later cases

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4

Stare decisis

“let the decision stand;” judicial decision making based on president

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5

Judicial Activism

a judicial philosophy whereby judges interpret existing laws and precedents loosely and interject their own values in court decisions

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6

Judicial Restraint

a judicial philosophy whereby judges adhere closely to statutes and precedents in reaching their decisions

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7

Jurisdiction

the authority of a court to hear a case; another definition is the geographic area over which a court or police department has authority

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8

Original Jurisdiction

the court in which a case starts

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9

Amicus Curiae Brief

a brief sent to the Supreme Court in support of one side of the case to try to persuade the Court how to rule

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10

Appellate Court

a court that hears an appeal from a lower court based on a mistake in interpreting the law or applying procedure; no new evidence is allowed and no witnesses are heard

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11

Appellate Jurisdiction

the authority of a court to hear an appeal

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12

Brief

a written argument stating your side of the case, submitted to the court

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13

Civil Law

laws dealing with non-criminal items like contracts

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14

Criminal Law

laws dealing with crimes against persons or property

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15

Rule of Four

at least four Supreme Justices have to agree to hear a case in order to grant a writ of certiorari

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16

Solicitor General

the lawyer that argues cases for the federal government in front of the Supreme Court

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17

Strict Constructionist

judicial philosophy that limits judicial interpretation to the narrowest interpretation possible - the original meaning of the Constitution

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18

Trial Court

where a case starts out; includes witness testimony and submission of evidence, and sometimes a jury

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19

Writ of Certiorari

a legal document whereby the Supreme Court requests the transcripts and files of a case decided in a lower court so the Supreme Court can review it to determine if a mistake was made interpreting the law or applying procedure

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