Name the Constitutional Amendment Vocab Landmark Supreme Court Cases Protecting Civil Rights More...

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Name the Constitutional Amendment

VocabLandmark Supreme

Court Cases

Protecting Civil Rights

More Supreme

Court Cases

100 100 100 100 100

200 200 200 200 200

300 300 300 300 300

400 400 400 400 400

500 500 500 500 500

Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of Speech, Press,

Religion, Petition, and Assembly

Answer – 100

First Amendment

Protects against unreasonable searches and seizures without

warrants

Answer – 200

Fourth Amendment

The right of U.S. citizens to vote regardless of sex

Answer – 300

Nineteenth Amendment

Ratified three years after the Civil War: Defines citizenship; establishes equal

protection and due process of law

Answer – 400

Fourteenth Amendment

Ratified in 1964: Abolished poll taxes (but only for Presidential, Vice Presidential, and Congressional

elections)

Answer – 500

Twenty-Fourth Amendment

Nonverbal actions meant to convey a political message, such as burning the

U.S. flag or wearing armbands to protest war

Answer – 100

Symbolic Speech

Racial segregation that occurs because of past social and economic conditions

or residential patterns

Answer – 200

De Facto Segregation

Stopping an action before it has actually occurred, like publishing the

Pentagon Papers

Answer – 300

Prior Restraint

This test, developed in the verdict of Schenk v. U.S., is performed to declare

whether or not speech should be limited

Answer – 400

Clear and Present Danger Test

Personal freedoms protected for all individuals

Answer – 500

Civil Liberties

Through the Fourteenth Amendment, the verdict of this Supreme Court case required states to provide counsel to

anyone charged with a felony

Answer – 100

Gideon v. Wainwright

This Supreme Court case deemed public school prayer unconstitutional

Answer – 200

Engle v. Vitale

First Supreme Court case to imply and protect the right to privacy, including a

right to family planning

Answer – 300

Griswold v. Connecticut

Supreme Court case that upheld the ordering of Japanese Americans into

internment camps during World War II regardless of citizenship

Answer – 400

Korematsu v. U.S.

1961 Supreme Court case that established the precedent for Fourth

Amendment rights: illegally seized evidence can not be used during local,

state, or federal trials

Answer – 500

Mapp v. Ohio

Though met with resistance in the South, it overturned the Plessy v.

Ferguson with “all deliberate speed.”

Answer – 100

Brown v. Board of Education

This act, passed by Congress, banned discrimination in employment and public facilities. It also allowed the

government to withhold federal funds from states and local areas not in

compliance

Answer – 200

Civil Rights Act of 1964

Federal agency established to enforce laws against job discrimination

Answer – 300

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

This act, passed by Congress, not only outlawed literacy and other

discriminatory tests but allowed federal officials to register new voters

Answer – 400

Voting Rights Act of 1965

In this 2003 case, the Supreme Court overturned a previous verdict and

ruled that states cannot intrude on the personal and private life of an

individual

Answer – 500

Lawrence v. Texas

This Supreme Court implies a “right to privacy” that protects a woman’s

freedom to choose abortion or not during the first three months of

pregnancy

Answer – 100

Roe v. Wade

Responses may be used in a court of law: this Supreme Court case ruling

requires law enforcement officials to advise a suspect of his/her

constitutional rights

Answer – 200

Miranda v. Arizona

Supreme Court case that deemed flag desecration as constitutional

Answer – 300

Texas v. Johnson

This Supreme Court case upheld affirmative action but declared specific

racial quotas unconstitutional

Answer – 400

University of California v. Bakke

In this 1833 case, the Supreme Court ruled that the Bill of Rights did not

apply to state or local laws

Answer – 500

Barron v. Baltimore