AP Government Schweitzer

AP US Government & Politics – Topics You Need to Know About


US Government & Politics

I. Constitutional Underpinnings of United States Government

Theoretical and Practical features of: Federalism, Separation of powers, Checks and balances

Historical situation at time of Constitutional Convention

Ideological and philosophical traditions on which the framers drew

Why did Madison fear factions?

What were the reasons for the swift adoption of the Bill of Rights?

USSC’s interpretation of key provisions in the Constitution

Theoretical perspectives on Constitution: democratic theory, theories of republican government, pluralism, and elitism

II. Political Beliefs and Behaviors

How political beliefs are formed, how they evolve, and the processes by which they are transmitted

Know why citizens hold certain beliefs about politics, how families, schools, and the media act to perpetuate or change these beliefs

Understand how political culture affects and informs political participation

Individuals engage in multiple forms of political participation:

Voting

Protest

Mass movements

Understand why individuals engage in various forms of political participation and how that participation may affect the political system

What leads citizens to differ from one another in their political beliefs and behaviors

Consequences of these differences

Focus on demographic features of the American population; awareness of group differences in political beliefs and behaviors

Different views that people hold of the political process

Understand how changes in political participation affect the political system

III. Political Parties, Interest Groups, and Mass Media

Understand mechanisms that allow citizens to organize and communicate their interests and concerns: (linkage institutions)

Political parties

Elections

Political action committees (PACs)

Interest groups – what they do, how they do it, and how this affects political process and public opinion

Mass media

Historical evolution of the US party system

Functions and structure of political parties and effects of parties on political process

Issues of party reform/historical party demographic shifts (realignment)

Campaign strategies and financing in the electronic age

Election laws and election systems

Development and role of PACs in elections

Party and individual voting behavior

Ideological and demographic differences between two major parties and third parties

Lobbying

Why some interests are represented by organized groups while others are not – and the consequences of this difference in representation/ who is and is not represented?

Why are certain segments of the population able to exert pressure on political institutions and actors in order to obtain favorable policies?

Role of the media in the political system

Impact of the media on:

Public opinion

Voter perceptions

Campaign strategies

Electoral outcomes

Agenda development

Images of officials and candidates

Symbiotic and conflictual relationship among candidates, elected officials, and the media

Goals and incentives of media as an industry and how those goals influence the nature of news coverage

Consequences of increasing concentration of major media outlets in fewer hands

IV. Institutions of National Government

Organization and powers – formal and informal – of major political institutions in US – Congress

Presidency

Bureaucracy

Federal courts

Understand that these are separate institutions sharing powers and the implications of that arrangement (separation of powers)

Understand the power balances and relationships between these institutions may evolve gradually or change dramatically as a result of crises; List examples of this:

Understand ties between various branches of national government and political parties, interest groups, the media, and state and local governments (i.e.: a study of the conflicting interests and powers of the President and Congress may help explain repeated struggles to adopt a national budget)

V. Civil Rights and Civil Liberties & Public Policy

Development of individual rights and liberties and their impact on citizens

Judicial interpretations of various civil rights and liberties such as:

Civil Rights:

Rights of minority groups and women


Civil Liberties:

Freedom of speech

Freedom of expression

The rights of the accused

Analysis of the workings of the USSC and familiarity with its most significant decisions

Do you know your court cases?

Legal, social, and political evolution following the USSC’s decisions regarding racial desegregation

Fourteenth Amendment and the doctrine of selective incorporation – used to extend protection of rights and liberties

Assess the strengths and weaknesses of USSC decisions as tools of social change

V. Public Policy

The result of interactions and dynamics among actors, interests, institutions, and processes (policy making process)

Formation of policy agendas, enactment of public policies by Congress, President, and implementation and interpretation of policies by the bureaucracy and the courts

Investigate policy networks and issue networks in domestic and foreign policy areas

Impact of federalism, interest groups, parties, and elections on policy processes and policymaking in the federal context

Familiarity with major public policies