AP Gov Chapter 2 Vocabulary Terms

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31 Terms

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Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union

A governing document that created a union of 13 sovereign states in which the states, not the national government, were supreme

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Unicameral

A one-house legislature

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Shays Rebellion

A popular uprising against the government of Massachusetts.

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Constitutional Convention

A meeting held by state delegates in 1787 to fix the articles of confederation.

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Writ of Habeas Corpus

The right of people detained by the government to know the charges against themselves.

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Bills of Attainder

When the legislature declares someone guilty without a trial

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Ex post facto laws

Laws punishing people for acts that were not crimes at the time they were committed.

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Virginia Plan

A plan of government calling for a three-branch government with a bicameral legislature, where more populous states would have more representation in Congress.

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New Jersey Plan

A plan of government that provided for a unicameral legislature with equal votes for each state.

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Grand Committee

A committee at the Constitutional Convention that worked out the compromise on representation.

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Great (Connecticut) Compromise

An agreement for a plan of government that drew upon both the New Jersey and Virginia Plans; it settled issues of state representation by calling for a bicameral legislature with a House of Representatives apportioned proportionally and a Senate apportioned equally.

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Bicameral

A two-house legislature

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Three-Fifths Compromise

Agreement reached by the delegates at the Constitutional Convention that a slave would count as three-fifths of a person in calculating a state’s representation.

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Compromise on Importation

Congress could not restrict the slave trade until 1808.

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Separation of Power

A design of government that distributes powers across institutions in order to avoid making one branch too powerful on its own.

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Checks and Balances

A design of government in which each branch has powers that can prevent the other branches from making policy.

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Federalism

The sharing of power between the national and state governments

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Legislative Branch

The institution responsible for making the laws

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Expressed or enumerated powers

Authority specifically granted to a branch of the government in the Constitution

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Necessary and Proper (Elastic) Clause

Language in Article I, Section 8, granting Congress the powers necessary to carry out its enumerated powers

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Executive Branch

The institution responsible for carrying out laws passed by the legislative branch

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Judicial Branch

The institution responsible for hearing and deciding cases through the federal courts

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Supremacy Clause

Constitutional provision declaring that the Constitution and all national laws and treaties are supreme law of the land

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Amendment

The process by which changes may be made to the Constitution

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Federalists

Supporters of the proposed Constitution, who called for a strong national government.

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Anti-Federalists

Those who opposed to the proposed Constitution, who favored stronger state governments.

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Federalist Papers

A series of 85 essays written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay and published between 1787 and 1788 that lay out the theory behind the Constitution.

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Federalist No. 51

An essay in which Madison argues that separation of powers and federalism prevent tyranny.

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Faction

A group of self-interested people who use the government to get what they want, trampling the rights of others in the process.

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Federalist No. 10

An essay in which Madison argues that the dangers of faction can be mitigated by a large republic and republican government.

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Brutus No. 1

An Anti-Federalist paper arguing that the country was too large to be governed as a republic and that the Constitution gave too much power to the national government.