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BULLSEYE VOCABULARY UNIT 1

BULLSEYE VOCABULARY

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BULLSEYE VOCABULARY. UNIT 1. Constitutional Underpinnings. Good Luck on your Test!!!!. Opposed the new Constitution, feared the new Constitution would erode fundamental liberties, and argued that the new Constitution was a class-based document serving the economic elite?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: BULLSEYE VOCABULARY

BULLSEYE VOCABULARYUNIT 1

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Constitutional Underpinnings

Good Luck on your Test!!!!

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Opposed the new Constitution, feared the new Constitution would erode fundamental liberties, and argued that the new Constitution was a class-based document serving the economic elite?

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Anti-Federalist

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The document that outlined the voluntary agreement betweenstates and was adopted as the first plan for a permanent union of the United States?

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Articles of Confederation

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The first ten Amendments to the Constitution passed after ratification specifically protecting individual liberties to fulfill promises made by the Federalists to the Anti-Federalists in return for their support?

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Bill of Rights

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Each branch requires the consent of the others for many of its decisions?

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Checks & Balances

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The plan adopted at the Constitutional Convention to provide for two chambers in Congress, one representing states equally and the otherrepresenting states on the basis of their share of the population?

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Connecticut Plan

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Concept or term that means that the U.S. government has two chambers in Congress?

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Bicameralism

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People must agree on who their rulers will be and the People are the primary source of government power?

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Consent of the Governed

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A nation’s basic law creating institutions, dividing power, and providing guarantees to citizens?

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Constitution

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The document used by the signers to announce and justify the Breech with their former government and specifically designed to substantiate their reasons?

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Declaration of Independence

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Groups of people, currently known as political parties or interest groups, who arise as a result of unequal distribution of wealth to seize the reins of government in their own interest?

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Factions

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A name given by James Madison to an alliance formed by two or more factions?

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Coalition

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Essays written to convince others to support the new constitution?

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Federalist Papers

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Argued for ratification of the Constitution by writing the Federalist Papers;included Madison, Hamilton, and James Madison?

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Federalist

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Two of the most important Federalist Papers written by James Madison?

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Federalist 10Federalist 51

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In Federalist 10, Madison argued this was needed to break and control the violence of Faction?

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A well constructed

Union

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In Federalist 10, Madison argued that this was a well constructed Union?

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Republican Form of government

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In Federalist 10, Madison argued we needed this type of Republic?

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Large (Extended)

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In Federalist 51, Madison argued we needed these to be used in structuring government?

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Checks & Balances;

Separation of Powers

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The courts have the power to decide whether the actions of the legislative and executive branches of state and national governments are in accordance with the Constitution?

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Judicial Review

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The Supreme Court case that established the power of Judicial Review for the Supreme Court?

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Marbury v. Madison (1803)

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Clear restrictions on what rulers could do; this safeguards natural rights?

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Limited Government

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These are rights to which people are entitled by natural law, including life,liberty, and property?

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Natural Rights

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The political thinker that influenced Thomas Jefferson in creating the Declaration?

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John Locke

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Locke’s Idea that the government had a duty to secure people’s rights?

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Social Contract

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Who later penned the term Social Contract and argued that people could abolish government if it did not secure rights?

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Jean Jacques Rousseau

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Individual that influenced Checks and Balances and Separation of Powers to be included in our U.S. Constitution?

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Montesquieu

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A plan by some of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention to provide each state with equal representation in Congress?

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New Jersey Plan

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A system based on the consent of the governed where power is exercised by elected representatives of the public?

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Republic

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Each branch of government would be independent of the others?

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Separation of Powers

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A series of armed attacks on courthouses to prevent judges fromforeclosing on farms?

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Shay’s Rebellion

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Students in AP Government usually study Shay’s Rebellion to reveal these?

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Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation

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Top 7 Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation?

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No ExecutiveNo Judicial 9 of 13 pass lawsAll to AmendCould not taxCould not regulate interstateNo National Currency

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The document where the foundations of U.S. government are written,providing for national institutions that each have separate but not absolute powers?

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U.S. Constitution

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A plan by some of the delegates to the Constitutional Convention to provide each state with a share of congressional seats based on its share of the population?

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Virginia Plan

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This enables people who are detained by authorities to secure an immediate inquiry and reasons why they have been detained?

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Writ of Habeas Corpus

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Two Ways to Propose a Constitutional Amendment?

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1. 2/3 vote both Houses of Congress.

2. 2/3 state legislatures ask congress for National Convention

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Two Ways to Ratify a Constitutional Amendment?

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1. ¾ state legislatures approve

2. Conventions in ¾ of the states approve

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Which Constitutional principle is revealed in the process to Amend the U.S. Constitution?

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Federalism

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A means of selecting policymakers and of organizing government so that policy represents and responds to the public’s preferences?

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Democracy

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Argues that society is divided along class lines and that an upper class rules on the basis of its wealth?

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Elitist Theory

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Institutions that make public policy for a society?

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Government

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Argues that too many strong influential groups cripple the government’sability to make coherent policy by dividing government and its authority?

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HyperPluralism

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where each interest uses its influence to thwart policies it opposes sothat no coalition forms a majority to establish policy?

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Policy Gridlock

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Institutions such as parties, elections, interest groups, and the media, which provide a connection between the preferences of citizens and the government’s policy agenda?

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Linkage Institutions

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Weighing the desires of the majority in choosing among policy alternatives?

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Majority Rule

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Protecting the rights and freedoms of the minority in choosing among policy alternatives?

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Minority Rights

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Argues that there are many centers of influence in which groups compete with one another for control over public policy through bargaining and compromise?

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Pluralist Theory

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Meeting at George Washington’s home in Mount Vernon in 1785 scheduled this meeting to discuss trade regulation. Not many attended so they scheduled another meeting?

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Annapolis Convention

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Agreement reached between Northern and Southern leaders during the Constitutional convention about how to count slaves in determining appropriation of Representatives to states?

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Three-fifths Compromise

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Thomas Jefferson, in the Declaration of Independence, referred to Locke’s Natural Rights as…

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Inalienable Rights

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Main goal of the American Revolution and our founding fathers?

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Liberty

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Meeting in Philadelphia in 1787 that produced a new Constitution?

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Constitutional Convention

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A law that declares a person, without a trial, to be guilty of a crime.

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Bill of Attainder

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A law that that makes an act criminal although the act was legal when it was committed?

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Ex Post Facto Law

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Federalism

Good Luck on your Test!!!!!!!!!!

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Broad program grants given more or less automatically to states and communities, which exercise discretion in how the money is spent?

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Block Grants

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Grants that can be used only for specific purposes of state and local spending?

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Categorical Grants

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where state and the national government responsibilities aremingled and blurred like a marble cake; powers and policies are shared?

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Cooperative Federalism

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Transferring responsibility for policies from the federal government to state and local governments?

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Devolution

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where states and the national government each remain supreme withintheir own spheres of power?

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Dual Federalism

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The statement in the Constitution which says that Congress has the powerto make all laws necessary and proper for carrying out its duties?

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Elastic Clause

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Powers of Congress found in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution?

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Enumerated Powers

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The Constitution requires each state to return a person charged with a crime inanother state to that state for trial or imprisonment?

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Extradition

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A system of shared power between two or

more levels of government?

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Federalism

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Pattern of spending, taxing, and providing grants in the federal

system?

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Fiscal Federalism

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A type of categorical grant where states and local governments do notapply for a grant but are given funds on the basis of a formula?

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Formula Grants

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Article IV of the Constitution requires states to provide reciprocity toward other states’ public acts, records, and civil judicial proceedings?

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Full Faith & Credit

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1824 Supreme Court case which further expanded Congress’ power to regulate interstate and international commerce by defining commerce very broadly toincorporate every form of commercial activity?

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Gibbons v. Ogden

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Powers beyond Congress’ enumerated powers that ensure that it can carry out its duties?

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Implied Powers

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A system where all power resides in the central government?

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Unitary System

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The term used to describe the entire set of interactions among national, state, and local governments?

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Intergovernmental Relations

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A system where all power resides in decentralized government?

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Confederal System

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1819 Supreme Court case, which established the supremacy of the national government over the states, included both enumerated and implied powers of Congress?

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McCulloch v. Maryland

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The Constitution prohibits states from discriminating against citizens of other states?

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Privileges and Immunities

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Categorical grants awarded on the basis of competitive applications?

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Project Grant

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Article VI of the Constitution states that the supreme law of the land is the Constitution, the laws of the national government, and treaties?

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Supremacy Clause

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Specifies that powers not delegated to the national government are reserved for the state government or the people?

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10th Amendment

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Powers that are not implied but are specifically written in ink and can be seen with the eyes in the Constitution?

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Expressed Powers

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No longer exist but had no restrictions at all on how states could spend money from the federal government?

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Revenue Sharing

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Another name for the Elastic Clause?

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Necessary & Proper Clause

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Clause that gives National government control over trade between the states; lately expanded to any economic activity?

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Commerce Clause

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Rule telling states what they must do whether they receive money or not; ex. ADA?

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Federal Mandate

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A power exercised by both state and national governments?

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Concurrent Powers

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Nickname for Cooperative Federalism?

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Marble Cake Federalism

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Nickname for Dual Federalism?

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Layer Cake Federalism

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The argument that states can refuse to enforce federal laws

perceived as unconstitutional?

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Nullification

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Tug of War argument over the meaning of

federalism that eventually caused the

Civil War?

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State’s Rightsvs

National Rights

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Nickname for Devolution?

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New Federalism

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State and local officials that form

groups to get Federal Grant

money?

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Intergovernmental Lobby

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States must use this to get

Categorical Grants?

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Matching Funds

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Requirements of states by the national

government that is not financed?

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Unfunded Mandates

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Requirements of states by the national government in order

to get funds?

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Conditions-Of –Aid

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Goal of President Reagan’s New Federalism?

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Decrease size of National

Government

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Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court that strengthened the National Government?

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John Marshall