The Constitution
Legal Philosophy
Structure & Selection
Powers and Duties
Types of Cases
100

This Article of the U.S. Constitution creates and defines the Judicial Branch

What is Article III?

100

The philosophy that judges should play an active role in shaping social policy and interpreting the Constitution for modern times.

What is Judicial Activism?

100

The three levels of the federal court system, from lowest to highest.

What are District, Circuit (Appeals), and Supreme Courts?

100

The primary job of the Judicial Branch regarding the laws of the United States.

What is to Interpret the Law?

100

A case involving a dispute between two people or organizations, usually over money or property.

What is a Civil Case?

200

According to the Constitution, this is the only crime specifically defined: levying war against the U.S. or helping enemies.

What is Treason?

200

The opposing philosophy where judges limit their own power, sticking strictly to the original intent of the law.

What is Judicial Restraint?

200

Under Article III, this is the length of a federal judge’s term, assuming "good behavior".

What is For Life?

200

The Supreme Court’s power to declare a law or executive action unconstitutional.

  • What is Judicial Review?
200

A case where the government charges a person with breaking a law.

What is a Criminal Case?

300

The Constitution gives this body the power to create "inferior" (lower) courts as needed.

What is Congress?

300

A legal system, like that in the U.S., where two advocate parties represent their case before an impartial person or jury.

What is an Adversarial System?

300

The number of justices currently serving on the U.S. Supreme Court.

What is Nine?

300

The term for a previous court decision that serves as a guide for future similar cases.

What is Precedent?

300

Legal cases involving ships, shipping, or crimes committed on the high seas fall under this category.

What is Admiralty (or Maritime) Law?


400

This amendment ensures that "the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial."

What is the Sixth Amendment?

400

This Latin phrase means "to stand by things decided" and is the basis for following precedent.

What is Stare Decisis?

400

This is the only level of the federal court system that uses a jury to reach a verdict.

What are District Courts?

400

To appeal a case to the Supreme Court, a party must request this formal order for the Court to review the lower court's record.

What is a Writ of Certiorari?

400

A person who brings a case against another in a court of law.

Who is a Plaintiff?


500

This clause in Article VI establishes that federal law and the Constitution take priority over state laws.

What is the Supremacy Clause?

500

The judicial philosophy that interprets the Constitution based on exactly what the words meant to the people who wrote them.

What is Originalism?

500

The two-step process for a person to become a federal judge.

What is Nomination by the President and Confirmation by the Senate?


500

When a higher court sends a case back to a lower court for a new trial or further action.

What is Remanding a case?

500

A person or group who is being sued or accused of a crime.

Who is a Defendant?

M
e
n
u