CHAPTER SIXTEEN – THE JUDICIARY

KEY TERMS: Briefly identify, define, and/or explain.

1)Hamilton – Federalist#78

2)Obama’s two appointments to the Supreme Court

3)reason why its more difficult to get judicial nominees confirmed

4)judicial review

5)judicial restraint approach

6)judicial activist approach

7)Supreme Court’s 3 historical eras:

a)1st period in the evolution of the Supreme Court (1787-1865)

b)2nd period (1865-1937)

c)3rd period (1938-present)

8)the “exceptions” clause (box on p. 414)

9)Dred Scott case

10) Owen Roberts

11) NFIB v. Sebelius(2012) decision

12) constitutional courts:

a)district courts

b)courts of appeals

13) legislative courts

14) senatorial courtesy

15) litmus test

16) dual court system

17) dual sovereignty doctrine

18) writ of certiorari

19) in forma pauperis

20) fee shifting

21) plaintiff

22) standing

23) sovereign immunity

24) class action suit

25) brief

26) solicitor general

27) amicus curiae

28) percuriam opinion

29) opinion of the Court

30) concurring opinion

31) dissenting opinion

32) staredecisis

33) political question

34) remedy

35) Congressional checks on the courts

KEY IDEAS: Explain in depth

1)Briefly describe John Marshall’s ingenious solution to the political trap presented

by the case of Marbury v. Madison (1803). How did this decision enlarge the

power of the courts. (box on p. 412)

2)Briefly discuss the arguments for and against the philosophy of judicial activism. (p. 429)

If you were president, would you seek to appoint activist judges? Explain.

CHAPTER FIVE – CIVIL LIBERTIES

KEY TERMS: Briefly identify, define, and/or explain.

1)civil liberties

2)civil rights

3)rights in conflict (offer an example)

4)cultural conflicts (offer an example)

5)14th Amendment’s “due process” clause

6)14th Amendment’s “equal protection” clause

7)selective incorporation

8)2 parts of First Amendment

9)prior restraint

10) clear and present danger test

11) libel

12) slander

13) obscenity

14) symbolic speech

15) “free exercise” clause

16) “establishment” clause

17) “wall of separation” principle

18) exclusionary rule

19) search warrant

20) probable cause

21) Miranda warning

22) good faith exception

23) public safety exception

24) inevitable discovery rule

25) USA Patriot Act

26) Real ID Act

27) FISA

28) NSA

KEY IDEAS: Explain in depth.

1) Explain how the process known as “selective incorporation” has greatly expanded the jurisdiction of the federal courts. (p. 99-100)

2) What is the constitutional foundation for the “wall of separation” between church and state? Use examples to illustrate some of the difficulties the Supreme Court has had in defining just how sturdy this wall should be. (p. 109-111)

CHAPTER SIX – CIVIL RIGHTS

KEY TERMS: Briefly identify, define, and/or explain.

1)civil rights

2)reasons why blacks had to rely on white allies to facilitate social change

3)Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)

4)“separate-but-equal” doctrine

5)Brown v. Board of Education (1954)

6)“all deliberate speed”

7)“Southern Manifesto”

8)suspect classification (box on p. 129)

9)strict scrutiny

10) “de jure” segregation

11) “de facto” segregation

12) Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg (1971)

13) “white flight”

14) civil disobedience

15) 4 developments that broke the deadlock over civil rights in Congress

16) “reasonableness” standard

17) intermediate scrutiny

18) Rostker v. Goldberg (1981)

19) 2 forms of sexual harassment

20) police powers

21) Roe v. Wade (1973)

22) affirmative action

23) reverse discrimination

24) compensatory action v. preferential treatment

25) Lawrence v. Texas (2003)

26) U.S. v. Windsor (2013)

27) Obergefell v. Hodges (2015) (Google it, it’s not in the chapter!)

KEY IDEAS: Explain in depth.

1)Explain why the efforts of blacks to change the law succeeded in the courts before they succeeded in Congress? (p. 123-5)

2)Where do you fall on the equality of opportunity v. equality of results continuum?

Explain your position by referencing at least two Supreme Court decisions. (p. 139-44)