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Flashcards focused on vocabulary from the Unit 1 Heimler Review Guide.
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The Enlightenment
A European intellectual movement in the 18th Century that influenced the American framers of the Constitution.
Natural Rights
The idea that people are born with rights from their Creator and therefore cannot be taken away by their ruler or government.
State of nature
A theoretical society before humans created governments where humans were free and needed their rights protected.
Social contract
An abstract agreement that people make as a society that individuals are willing to give up some power to the government in order for the government to protect their rights.
Popular sovereignty
The idea that the power of any government comes from the people.
Separation of powers
Ensures that power is separated into many parts, so that not one person/body can get or use too much power.
Republicanism
A form of democracy that allows people to elect leaders to represent them and to create laws and policies in the public interest.
Limited government
States effective government has power distributed among many members, each with the ability to check the powers of the others.
Participatory democracy
A democratic model that emphasizes broad participation in the political process by most, if not all, members of a society.
Elite democracy
A democratic model emphasizes more limited participation in policy making on the assumption that government is complicated and therefore the most educated people need to run it.
Pluralist democracy
Present primarily when citizens join interest groups like the NAACP or NRA.
Brutus I
Supports a broad, participatory model and feared the limitation of personal liberties reflected in a larger republic like the United States.
Federalist 10
Argues for a pluralist model in that many competing factions in a large republic will uphold liberty because of competition.
Factions
A group of people who believe their interests are more important than any other interest.
Brutus I's concerns about a large and diverse republic
Fears the immense amount of power that is invested in the federal government under the new Constitution because it took away many aspects of local control and participatory government.
United States government under the Articles of Confederation
Under the Article of Confederation the United States government was very weak and the state governments were strong.
Constitutional Convention
Called to revise the Articles of Confederation, but ultimately an entirely new Constitution was drafted.
Article V
The process for amending the Constitution.
Legislative branch responsibility
The responsibility of the legislative branch is to propose and make laws, which no other branch is able to do.
Stakeholders
People who speak to the law by writing letters, sending emails, or engaging with their representatives.
Executive branch responsibility
The responsibility of the executive branch is to execute and enforce the laws passed by Congress, which no other branch is able to do.
Judicial branch responsibility
The responsibility of the judicial branch is to determine the constitutionality of laws, which no other branch is able to do.
Federalism
The sharing of power between national and state governments.
Exclusive powers
Those that are specifically given to the federal government and found in the Constitution.
Reserved powers
Those powers that are kept by the states as stated in the 10th Amendment.
Concurrent powers
Those that are shared by both the federal and state governments.
Fiscal federalism
Power shared primarily through money, which is the most common example of federalism in action.
Devolution
The process of returning power to the states and away from the federal government.
Commerce clause
Allows the federal government to regulate commerce that flows between the states, and has been widely used to justify federal actions.
Necessary and proper clause (elastic clause)
Allows Congress to make any other law that is necessary and proper to complete their jobs listed as exclusive powers in the Constitution.
Supremacy clause
States that when the state and the federal government conflicted, federal law will always trump state law.