Waples, American Government: Stories of a Nation for the AP® Course, 1e, Chapter 2

0.0(0)
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/33

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

34 Terms

1
New cards

constitution

A document that sets out the fundamental principles of governance and establishes the institutions of government.

2
New cards

republic

A government ruled by representatives of the people.

3
New cards

Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union

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

4
New cards

unicameral

A one-house legislature.

5
New cards

Shays's Rebellion

A popular uprising against the government of Massachusetts.

6
New cards

Constitutional Convention

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

7
New cards

writ of habeas corpus

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

8
New cards

bills of attainder

When the legislature declares someone guilty without a trial.

9
New cards

ex post facto laws

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

10
New cards

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.

11
New cards

New Jersey Plan

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

12
New cards

Grand Committee

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

13
New cards

Great (Connecticut) Compromise

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

14
New cards

bicameral

A two-house legislature.

15
New cards

Three-Fifths Compromise

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

16
New cards

Compromise on Importation

Congress could not restrict the slave trade until 1808.

17
New cards

separation of powers

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

18
New cards

checks and balances

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

19
New cards

federalism

The sharing of power between the national government and the states.

20
New cards

legislative branch

The institution responsible for making laws.

21
New cards

expressed or enumerated powers

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

22
New cards

necessary and proper or elastic clause

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

23
New cards

implied powers

Authority of the federal government that goes beyond its expressed powers.

24
New cards

executive branch

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

25
New cards

judicial branch

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

26
New cards

supremacy clause

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

27
New cards

amendment

The process by which changes may be made to the Constitution.

28
New cards

Federalists

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

29
New cards

Antifederalists

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

30
New cards

Federalist Papers

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

31
New cards

Federalist No. 51

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

32
New cards

faction

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

33
New cards

Federalist No. 10

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

34
New cards

Brutus No. 1

An Antifederalist 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.