Democracy in Tension
Federalism in Practice
Rights and Liberties
Congress as an Institution
Explaining Political Outcomes
100

This democratic view prioritizes broad participation and sees citizen engagement as essential to legitimacy.

What is participatory democracy? 

100

This amendment is most often cited when states argue the federal government has overreached.

What is the 10th? 
100

These set of amendments generally protect people from government infringement. 

What are civil liberties?

100

According to Mayhew, this is the primary motivation of members of Congress.

What is reelection? 

100

This concept explains why cooperation is difficult even when all actors would benefit.

What is a collective action problem?

200

This view argues democracy works best when elites govern and citizens play a limited role.

What is the minimalist view of democracy?

200

This form of federalism emphasizes shared responsibilities between state and federal governments.

What is cooperative federalism?

200

Civil liberties are primarily protected through this branch of government.

What is the judiciary? 

200

This congressional feature allows members to claim credit for bringing resources back home.

What is pork barrel spending?

200

This theory assumes power is widely distributed but is criticized for ignoring inequality.

What is pluralism?

300

In this political system, citizens elect representatives to make laws and govern on their behalf.

What is a representative democracy?
300

This clause enables Congress “to make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying…” 


What is the elastic clause?

300

This amendment is the constitutional bridge that allows most rights to apply to the states.

What is the 14th? 

300

This institutional rule gives the Senate minority disproportionate power.

What is the filibuster?

300

This institutional feature, in which the legislature is made up of two chambers, is encourages compromise but also slows policymaking.

What is bicameralism?

400

Federalists feared this outcome if democracy became too direct.


Majoritarian Tyranny

400

This form of federalism emphasizes distinct and separate responsibilities between state and federal governments.

What is dual federalism?

400

Before Brandenburg, this standard allowed greater restriction of speech during wartime.

What is 'clear and present danger' or Schenck? 

400

This organizational feature allows Congress to divide labor among its members.

What are committees?

400

This concept helps explain why Americans approve of their own representative but not Congress as a whole.

What is the Paradox of Congress?

500

Federalist Paper #51 emphasizes this problem as a reason for separating powers.

What are factions? 

500

This Supreme Court decision limited federal power under the commerce clause, ruling that the Gun-Free School Zones Act was unconstitutional, reaffirming federalism by protecting state power over local issues like gun control.

What is United States v. Lopez?

500

This concept explains how privacy rights emerge even though “privacy” is not explicitly listed in the Constitution.

What are the penumbras of privacy or zones of privacy? 
500

According to Fenno, this constituency is made up of the voters who are most likely to turn out. 

What is the reelection constituency?
500

This democratic feature can prevent sudden or extreme policy change.

What is gridlock?

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