Term
The phrase “a lawyer’s brief justifying a revolution” has been used to describe the ________. |
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Definition
Declaration of Independence |
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What the colonists sought in proclaiming independence from Great Britain was political power embodied in a __________. |
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Definition
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Term
_________ rights are based on nature and Providence. |
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Definition
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Term
Where were the essential rights demanded from the British--life, liberty, and property--derived from? |
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Definition
Certain natural rights ordained by God. |
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Term
The principal goal of the American Revolution was _______. |
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Definition
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Term
One of the basic liberties sought by the colonists through independence from Great Britain was _____________. |
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Definition
Freedom from taxation without representation. |
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Term
The theory of ________ provided the basis for the colonists’ justification of the liberties they sought. |
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Definition
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Term
Jefferson’s phrase, “the pursuit of happiness,” stated in the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence, was more specifically interpreted by the colonists to mean the right to ________. |
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Definition
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Term
The list of the essential rights demanded by the colonists included life, liberty, and _______. |
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Definition
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Term
The Constitution was signed in ______ and ratified by the thirteen states. |
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Definition
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Term
The purpose of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 was to ___________. |
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Definition
Revise the Articles of Confederation |
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Term
James Madison’s conclusions of examination of historical data on republics, confederations, and aristocracies to learn about the formation of government are found in the ___________. |
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Definition
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Term
John Lock’s notion of the “________” might best be exemplified today by international relations between the superpowers. |
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Definition
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Term
What was the central issue in the framing of the U.S. Constitution? |
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Definition
How strong to make the central government. |
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Term
Who were the two leaders that were conspicuously absent from the Constitutional Convention? |
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Definition
Thomas Jefferson & Patrick Henry |
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Term
In an early test of the powers of the Articles of Confederation, the Continental Congress failed to deal with an uprising in western Massachusetts known as __________. |
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Definition
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Term
What was significant about Shay’s Rebellion to the colonists? |
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Definition
It showed how weak the national government was and that it lacked the power to maintain peace and order. |
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Term
A “council of revision” for acts of the national legislature was proposed in the _______. |
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Definition
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Term
The Virginia Plan would have granted the national legislature the power to veto _______ any time it chose. |
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Definition
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Term
The _______ was a reaction by some states primarily to the fear that the Virginia Plan gave too much power to populous states. |
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Definition
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Term
The New Jersey plan would have allotted votes in Congress to states on the basis of ______. |
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Definition
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Term
The _______ was intended merely to adopt amendments to the Articles of Confederation. |
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Definition
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Term
What effect has the nature of the amendment process had on amendments to the U.S. Constitution? |
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Definition
It has kept the number of amendments relatively few in number. |
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Term
In the U.S. Constitution, a limitation on democratization was imposed with the creation of the ________. |
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Definition
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Term
Relative to the notion of democratic government, the Supreme Court’s power of ________ places limits on democracy. |
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Definition
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Term
What was a way the power of the people--popular majority rule-- limited by the U.S. Constitution? |
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Definition
By making the amending of the U.S. Constitution relatively difficult. |
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Term
The goal of the Framers of the U.S. Constitution was to create a __________ based on a system of representation. |
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Definition
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Term
What was another compromise worked out at the Constitutional Convention after the Great Compromise relating to the election of the president? |
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Definition
The use of an electoral college for choosing a president. |
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Term
Seats in Congress were allocated on the basis of both equality (Senate) and population (House) under the _____________. |
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Definition
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Term
Dividing power between the states and the national government is referred to as ________. |
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Definition
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Term
What are the two ways an amendment to the Constitution can be proposed? |
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Definition
A 2/3 vote of both houses of Congress A national convention called by Congress at the request of 2/3 of the states. |
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Term
What are the two key principles in the framing of the U.S. Constitution that involves a system of checks and balances in which power is dispersed? |
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Definition
Separation of power and Federalism |
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Term
The concept of the _________ involves the division of the functions of government. |
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Definition
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Term
Generally, the _________ felt that the government created by the U.S. Constitution was too strong and too centralized. |
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Definition
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Term
How did ratification of the U.S. Constitution take place? |
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Definition
By special conventions elected by the people. |
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Term
To James Madison, an important source of national unity and a guarantee of liberty in society was ___________. |
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Definition
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Term
What are three ways in which Congress can check the federal courts? |
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Definition
Refusing to confirm a nominee (Senate only) Changing the number and jurisdiction of the lower courts Impeaching a judge |
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Term
________ is when a person cannot be imprisoned without first being brought before a judge, who in turn finds sufficient cause for his or her detention. |
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Definition
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Term
Why didn’t the Founders include a bill or rights in the beginning? |
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Definition
They believed they were creating a government of limited powers & thought is was unnecessary. |
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Term
James Madison’s main argument in favor of a federalist position, stated in Federalist 10 and 51, was in defense of ________. |
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Definition
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Term
In which Federalist Paper does James Madison warn against the danger of factions? |
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Definition
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Term
_____ of the slaves were counted for purposes of allotting seats in the House of Representatives. |
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Definition
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Term
The Bill of Rights to the U.S. Constitution was intended to limit the power of ___________. |
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Definition
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Term
Ratification of the U.S. Constitution was opposed by _________. |
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Definition
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Term
What were the three reasons why state delegations at the Constitutional Convention voted down the bill of rights? |
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Definition
The U.S. Const. already had a number of guarantees of individual freedom Most states in 1787 had a bill of rights Most individual rights were implied by the Const. |
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Term
Why did the Constitution fail to outlaw slavery? |
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Definition
Southern support was essential to the adoption of the document. |
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Term
Until 1808, the national government was prohibited from ________. |
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Definition
Restricting the slave trade |
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Term
What did the U.S. Constitution provide for slaves escaping to free states? |
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Definition
Be returned to their masters |
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Term
How did the fact that some of the Founders of the U.S. Constitution held government IOUs influence their support for the Constitution? |
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Definition
If you owned IOUs, you had a strong economic motive for wanting the national government to survive. |
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Term
_______ tended to favor a weak decentralized government as a protection of liberty. |
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Definition
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Term
Most amendments to the U.S. Constitution have been ratified by the vote of ________. |
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Definition
¾ of the state legislatures |
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Term
What is one of the reasons given why the U.S. government is poorly equipped to handle problems such as dependence on foreign oil? |
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Definition
It is due to its separation of powers. |
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Term
What is a major argument in favor of reducing the separation of powers called for in the U.S. Constitution? |
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Definition
It would allow prompt, decisive leadership in times of crisis. |
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Term
One of the criticisms of the separation of powers is that the president is suppose to be in charged of the bureaucracy, however, he has to share this authority with ________. |
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Definition
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Term
The _______ would allow a president to veto part of a bill while approving the rest. |
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Definition
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Term
Thomas Jefferson originally included _____ in his list of rights in drafting the Declaration of Independence. |
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Definition
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Term
Under the ________ , the national government could neither levy taxes nor regulate commerce. |
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Definition
Articles of Confederation |
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Term
_________ was elected president in 1785, but never showed up for the job. |
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Definition
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Term
_______ between the states was greatly hampered during the era of the Articles of Confederation. |
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Definition
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Term
George Washington believed the country could survive only with a __________. |
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Definition
Strong national government |
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Term
Shay’s Rebellion was put down with a ______. |
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Definition
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Term
The ________ called for the creation of a two-house legislature with representation based on the size of the state. |
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Definition
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Term
The _______ reconciled the interests of the small and large states over representation. |
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Definition
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Term
The Founders sought to limit the _______ spirit of their times. |
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Definition
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Term
A _______ is a government in which a system of representation operates. |
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Definition
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Term
_______ was conceived as a system for keeping some factions from dominating others. |
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Definition
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Term
The _________ favored a strong national government. |
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Definition
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Term
The proponents of the U.S. Constitution were called ________. |
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Definition
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Term
The great issued before the state conventions in 1787 was _______, not democracy. |
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Definition
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Term
At the time the U.S. Constitution was written, ______ accounted for about 1/3 of the population of the southern states. |
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Definition
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Term
The Constitution forbade outlawing _____ for 20 years. |
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Definition
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Term
The ______ is favored by those who wish to put tighter controls on federal spending. |
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Definition
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Term
What is needed to give the president a true line-item veto? |
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Definition
A Constitutional amendment |
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Term
Each state had _____ votes under the Articles of Confederation. |
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Definition
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Term
John Locke believed that the “end of government” was ____________. |
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Definition
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Term
Reflecting the natural rights philosophy, the Declaration of Independence stated that government derive their just powers from ________. |
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Definition
The consent of the governed. |
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Term
The Declaration of Independence is based on John Locke’s two concepts of _________. |
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Definition
Concept of natural rights and the idea that government be built on the consent of the governed. |
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Term
John Locke’s ideas on natural rights were related to human law in that natural rights were considered __________ than human law. |
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Definition
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Term
What were the four basic concepts of John Locke’s theory of government? |
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Definition
Natural rights, consent of the governed, limited government, and property rights |
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Term
What were the four basic concepts of John Locke’s theory of government? |
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Definition
Natural rights, consent of the governed, limited government, and property rights |
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Term
In _________ philosophy, the requirements that standing laws be known and private property be preserved impose two major limits on government. |
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Definition
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Term
The justification for separation from England in the Declaration of Independence was based heavily on the ideas of the English philosopher _________. |
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Definition
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Term
Thomas Jefferson’s phrase “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” was a modification of John Locke’s phrase “Life, liberty, and ________.” |
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Definition
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Term
What was the sole purpose of government according to John Locke? |
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Definition
To protect natural rights. |
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Term
The foundation of John Locke’s philosophy was that human beings derive their rights from ________. |
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Definition
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Term
At the top of the political agenda during the period of the Articles of Confederation was __________. |
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Definition
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Term
_________ was a n uprising by farmers to prevent judges from foreclosing on farms. |
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Definition
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Term
Which state boycotted the Constitutional Convention? |
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Definition
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Term
Shay’s rebellion was a dramatic example of the ________ of the national government under the Articles of Confederation. |
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Definition
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Term
What was the significance of the Annapolis meeting? |
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Definition
It issued the original call for the constitutional convention in Philadelphia. |
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Term
What were the three major groups that met at the Constitutional Convention in 1787? |
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Definition
Wealthy planters, lawyers, and merchants. |
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Term
Besides Shay’s rebellion, what happened after the Revolutionary War that showed the weakness of the Articles of Confederation? |
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Definition
Postwar depression that severely hurt small farmers and many others. |
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Term
What was the original, sole and express purpose of the convention in Philadelphia? |
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Definition
To revise the Articles of Confederation. |
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Term
The first two weeks of the Constitutional Convention were spent debating the nature of __________. |
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Definition
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Term
The view of human nature most prevalent among the Founding Fathers was that people are self-interested in acquiring ___________. |
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Definition
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Term
The most influential man at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 was ___________. |
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Definition
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Term
According to James Madison and many of the delegates at the constitutional convention, what was the primary source of political conflict? |
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Definition
Unequal distribution of wealth and property. |
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Term
The philosophy of the writers of the Constitution was based in part on the belief that the principal object of government was the preservation of ______. |
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Definition
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Term
Most delegates to the Constitutional Convention believed that the secret of good government is a _________. |
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Definition
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Term
Most of the delegates at the constitutional convention regarded _________ as the greatest threat to government. |
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Definition
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Term
How did the Constitutional Convention deal with slavery? |
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Definition
It recognized it by providing for the return of escaped slaves |
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Term
The Virginia plan was based on _____ while the New Jersey Plan was based on ______. |
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Definition
Population; equal representation |
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Term
The Connecticut Compromise gives more representation in Congress to people who live in states with ______ populations than it does people who live in _________ states. |
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Definition
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Term
On the issue of slaves, the Constitution specified that slaves would count as ____ persons for counting the nation’s population and determining seats in the House. |
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Definition
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Term
The government designed at the Constitutional Convention allowed the voters to directly elect __________. |
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Definition
Only the House of Representatives |
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Term
Under the Constitution, the number of Senators is based on ________ and the members of the House are based on _________. |
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Definition
Two per state; population |
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Term
How was the debate at the Philadelphia convention over eligibility to vote resolved? |
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Definition
It was left up to the individual states. |
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Term
The framers of the Constitution gave the chief economic policy making role to ________. |
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Definition
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Term
What were the four major prohibitions of states under the Constitution? |
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Definition
Printing paper money, placing duties on imports from other states, interfering with lawfully contracted debts, harboring slaves. |
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Term
What did the Constitution do to put the national economy on sound footing? |
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Definition
It required the national gov’t. to repay all government debts incurred under the Continental Congress. |
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Term
What negated the Constitution requirement of states to return runaway slaves to their rightful owners? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the four violations of individual rights forbidden in the original Constitution? |
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Definition
Suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, passing ex post facto laws, passing bills of attainder, and strict limits on the prosecution of treason. |
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Term
Madisonian principles in the Constitution were based on a concern that government would be dominated by a _________. |
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Definition
Majority of minority faction. |
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Term
What were the two key elements of the Madisonian model? |
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Definition
Keep most of the gov’t. beyond the control of a popular majority. Separate the powers of different institutions. |
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Term
The system of ________ in the Constitution means that change usually comes slowly, if at all, and moderation and compromise are typical in our political system. |
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Definition
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Term
Congress is prohibited under the Constitution from passing ________, which punish people or increase the penalties for acts that were not as punishable when committed. |
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Definition
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Term
The Constitution prohibits Congress or the states from passing ________, which punish people without a trial. |
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Definition
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Term
The Constitution includes a provision that persons detained by authorities must be held on specific charge or released. This is known as _____. |
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Definition
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Term
The Madisonian system has a ______ bias favoring the status quo. |
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Definition
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Term
Ratification of the Constitution needed the approval of __________ states. |
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Definition
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Term
What was added to the Constitution in order to get it ratified? |
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Definition
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Term
The __________ were essays in support of ratification of the Constitution. |
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Definition
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Term
The Constitution was ratified by _________ in each of the states. |
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Definition
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Term
The “unwritten constitution” may have an impact on the ___________ of the Constitution. |
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Definition
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Term
Political parties are an important example of the ________. |
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Definition
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Term
To Propose a formal amendment to the Constitution, one needs to have a ______ vote in Congress. |
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Definition
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Term
Constitutional amendments are usually ratified by _____________. |
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Definition
Legislatures of 3/4ths of the states. |
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Term
What has been the impact of the amendments to the Constitution? |
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Definition
It has made it more eqalitarian and democratic. |
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Term
What did the failure of the Equal Rights Amendment show? |
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Definition
That a national majority in favor of an amendment is not sufficient to add it to the Constitution. |
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Term
The development of the two-party system is an example of informal constitutional change through _____. |
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Definition
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Term
The ________ has increased in significance and power as a result of increased public demands for a broader scope of government. |
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Definition
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Term
The Supreme Court case ______ asserted the power of the Court to check the actions of the other branches through judicial review. |
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Definition
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Term
How has the Constitution changed in regard to voter eligibility? |
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Definition
It has been amended several times to expand the electorate. |
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Term
What have some scholars suggested was a consequence of separation of powers and checks and balances? |
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Definition
A fragmented policy-making policy |
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Term
The U.S. has the oldest written ________ in the world. |
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Definition
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Term
The Jamestown colonists set a political precedent by instituting a ________ ________. |
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Definition
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Term
The major historical and political significance of the ________ ________ was that it was the start of the first settlement in America by the British and it served as a prototype for many similar compacts. |
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Definition
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Term
As a political document, the Mayflower Compact was a constitution of ________ _________. |
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Definition
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Term
Why were taxes imposed on the colonists? |
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Definition
To pay for England’s war debt |
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Term
The tax called “taxation without representation” was the __________. |
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Definition
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Term
Why was the resolution of Independence significant? |
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Definition
Because it established the legitimacy of the new nation. |
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Term
Thomas Paine’s pamphlet, Common Sense, advocated the idea that a government of our own is our _______. |
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Definition
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Term
The colonists’ fury over taxation climaxed in the __________. |
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Definition
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Term
What was one of the main actions of the Second Continental Congress? |
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Definition
To establish an army and appoint a commander in chief. |
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Term
What was stated in the resolution passed by the First Continental Congress? |
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Definition
It expressed colonial grievances to King George. |
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Term
What was the British response to the First Continental Congress? |
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Definition
It treated the Congress’s first actions as an open act of rebellion. |
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Term
What was the political significance of the First Continental Congress? |
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Definition
It represented the first formal act of cooperation among the colonies. |
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Term
The original draft of the Declaration of Independence included a ____________. |
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Definition
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Term
What did the Republicans oppose? |
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Definition
The monarchy, a strong central government, and any restraint of the power of local groups. |
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Term
What were the state governments doing during the time of the Revolution, 1776 to 1781? |
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Definition
Adopting their own written constitutions. |
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Term
What were two of the major powers under the Articles of Confederation? |
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Definition
To regulate foreign affairs and establish coinage and weights and measures. |
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Term
What was the Annapolis convention ostensibly called to do? |
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Definition
To discuss commercial problems. |
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Term
What kind of government did the majority of delegates to the Philadelphia convention advocate? |
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Definition
A strong central government. |
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Term
What kind of government did Alexander Hamilton advocate? |
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Definition
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Term
What does the Supremacy doctrine assert? |
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Definition
The superiority of national law over state law. |
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Term
________ drafted the Bill of Rights from over 200 state recommendations. |
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Definition
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