Term
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Definition
"negative rights" freedoms guaranteed to individuals that take the form of restraints on the government. Declares what the government cannot do |
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Term
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Definition
"positive rights" declare what the government must do or provide. they are powers and privileges that are guaranteed to individualss and protected against arbitrary removal at the hands of the government or other indviduals |
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Term
To what arena of government did the bill of rights apply? |
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Definition
To the federal government but not the states, as most amendments were in the state constitutions anyway, and this limitation served to limit the federal government, amendments began applying to the states via the 14th amendment with the due process of law |
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Term
Which of civil liberties and civil rights does the bill of rights contain? |
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Definition
Both are contained in the bill of rights, and in the 14th amendment as well when referring to the constitution |
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Term
What do the people posess and what does the government possess? |
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Definition
People possess rights and the government possesses powers |
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Term
What are the two clauses in the first amendment dealing with freedom of religion? |
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Definition
the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause |
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Term
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Definition
Prohibits laws that establish religion |
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Term
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Definition
prevents government from interfering with exercise of religion |
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Term
With freedom of religion, what is limited and what is unlimited? |
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Definition
Beliefs are unlimited and practice is limited |
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Term
What does the supreme court believe of the establishment clause? |
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Definition
That it requires the government to remain neutral |
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Term
What has the court not interpreted of the Establishment clause? |
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Definition
That it bars all assistance that incidentally aids religious institutions |
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Term
What did the establishment clause erect according to Thomas Jefferson? |
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Definition
A wall of separation between church and state |
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Term
What are supreme court cases that dealt with the establishment clause? |
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Definition
[Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971)] [Agostini v. Felton] [Zelman v. Simmons-Farris] [Lynch v. Donelly] |
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Term
What is the criteria of the test to dermine constitutionality under establishment clause for government programs? |
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Definition
Must have secure purpose, the effect must not be to advance or inhibit religion, and it must not entangle government excessively with religion |
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Term
What was the mandate on prayer in schools? |
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Definition
That it signifies government support of relgion, the supreme court cracked down in [Engel v. Vitale], it still persists, though schools can have afterschool religious activities |
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Term
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Definition
A standard used in supreme court in deciding whether a law or policy is to be judged constitutional, to pass the law or policy must be justified by a compelling government interest, as well as being the least restrictive means for achieving that interest |
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Term
What is the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA)? |
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Definition
An act signed by Clinton in 1993 that put strict scrutiny back in practice |
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Term
What is the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA)? |
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Definition
An act signed by Clinton in 1993 that put strict scrutiny back in practice |
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Term
What are the free expression clauses? |
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Definition
The Press and Speech clauses of the first amendment |
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Term
What is the dominant view of the free-expression clauses? |
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Definition
That they confer a right to restricted discussion of public affairs, many scholars believe that framers did not understnad the clause |
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Term
What do the free expression clauses bar and what is the terms definition? |
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Definition
The Free Expression Amendments bar most forms of prior restraint. Prior Restraint is censorship before publication, as well as after the fact persecution for political and other discourse |
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Term
What is the clear and Present Danger test? Who formulated the test? |
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Definition
It is a means by which th supreme court has distinguished between speech as the advocacy of ideas, which is protested by the first amendment, and speech as incitement which is not. The test was formulated by Justice Oliver Wendell |
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Term
What are some supreme court cases that deal with the present danger clause? |
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Definition
[Schenck v. United States (1919)] [Gitlow v. New York (1925)] [Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969)] |
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Term
What is an exception to free speech? What is a supreme court case that deals with this? |
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Definition
Fighting wordx, Chaplinksy v. New Hampshire |
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Term
What is the Communications Decency Act of 1996? |
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Definition
That it is a crime for a person to knowingly circulate sexual material to those under 18, which was declared unconstitutional |
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Term
What does the supreme deem about obscene material? |
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Definition
That it is outside of the constitutions protection |
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Term
What are some supreme court cases that deal with obscenity? |
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Definition
[Roth v. United States (1957)] [Miller v. California (1973)] |
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Term
What is thought about Freedom of the Press? |
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Definition
That it is essential to a free society |
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Term
What is defamation of character in the press? |
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Definition
Libel and Slander. Libel is written defamention while slander is oral. Libel is more serious. |
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Term
What is a supreme court case that deals with defamation of character? |
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Definition
New York Times v. Sullivan (1964) |
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Term
What are some supreme court cases that deal with Prior Restraint and the Press? |
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Definition
Near v. Minnesota in 1931 and New York Times v. United States |
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Term
What are bills of attainder? |
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Definition
Laws that make an individual guilty of a crime without trial |
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Term
What is an ex post facto law? |
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Definition
Laws that declare an action a crime after it has occured, a law that the government is prohibited from enacting |
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Term
What is the Due Process of Law and what amendment does it belong to? |
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Definition
It regires gov to adhere to appropriate procedures and forbids unreasonable gov action. It is a part of the 14th amendment |
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Term
What was due process of law fundamental in? |
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Definition
Spreading the Bill of Rights of the United States Constitution to the States, a sponge |
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Term
What is a supreme court case involving due process of law? |
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Definition
Palko v. Connecticut (1937), Duncan v. Louisiana (1968), Gideon v. Wainwright, Miranda v. Arizona, Wolf v. Colorado (1949), Griswald v. Connecticut (1965) |
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Term
By what year was most of the bill of rights applicable to the states? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the miranda warnings? |
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Definition
the right to remain silent, words can be used against you, right to talk to a lawyer before questioning, if you cannot afford a lawyer one will be provided by the state. Inspired by Miranda v. Arizona |
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Term
What is the exclusionary Rule? |
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Definition
That evidence obtained from an illegal search and seizure cannot be used in a trial |
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Term
What supreme court case used exclusionary rule? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the good faith exception and what supreme court case established it? |
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Definition
That a state could introduce at trial evidence seized on the basis of a mistakenly issued warrant. Inspired by United States v. Leon (1984) |
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Term
What is the good faith exception and what supreme court case established it? |
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Definition
That a state could introduce at trial evidence seized on the basis of a mistakenly issued warrant. Inspired by United States v. Leon (1984) |
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Term
What supreme court case involved the Patriot Act |
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Definition
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Term
What did Griswald. v. Connecticut establish about the bill of rights? |
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Definition
That the principle was to create a right to make certain intimate personal choices |
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Term
What supreme court cases involved homosexuality? |
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Definition
Bowers v. Hardwick and Lawrence and Garner v. Texas |
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Term
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Definition
a purchasing or contracting provision that reserves a certain percentage of funds for minority owned contractos |
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Term
What was the Civil Rights Act of 1991? |
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Definition
An act that reversed or altering 13 court decisions that had narrowed civil rights protection |
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Term
What was the Civil Rights Act of 1866? |
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Definition
Called Section 1981, it offers broad protection against discrimination to all minorities |
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Term
Elementary and Secondary School Act of 1965 |
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Definition
Provided billions of fed dollars to schools the fact that funds could be withheld based on discrimination scared some schools |
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Term
What was the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964? |
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Definition
provided education and training to combat poverty |
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Term
What was the voting rights act of 1965? |
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Definition
Attorney general sent voter registration supervisors to areas in which fewer than half the eligible minority voters had been registered |
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Term
What was the Fair Housing Act of 1968? |
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Definition
An act that banned discrimination in the rental and sale of housing |
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Term
What was the Americans with disabilities Act of 1990? |
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Definition
An act that recognized disabled as a protected minority, extends Civil Rights Act of 1964 to minorities, it includes those with aids, alcoholism and drug addition, it guarantees them access t employment, transportation, public accommodations, and communication servoces |
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Term
What is affirmative action? |
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Definition
Any of a wide range of progams from special recuitment efforts o numerical quotas aimed at expounding opportunity for wome and minority groups |
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