Foundations of Government
The Constitution
Federalism
Civil Liberties
Civil Rights
Public Opinion & Socialization
Voting & Elections
Media
100

What are the three main functions of government?

Order, protection, public goods

100

What document came before the Constitution?

Articles of Confederation

100

What clause makes federal law supreme?

Supremacy Clause

100

What amendment protects freedom of speech?

First Amendment

100

What amendment abolished slavery?

13th Amendment

100

What is the process of developing political beliefs?

Political socialization

100

What amendment gave women the right to vote?

19th Amendment

100

This is the primary role of the media in a democracy.

Inform the public

200

What type of government is ruled by a king or queen?

Monarchy

200

What compromise created a bicameral legislature?

Great Compromise

200

What powers are shared by state and federal governments?

Concurrent powers

200

What amendment extended rights to states?

14th Amendment

200

What amendment guarantees equal protection?

14th Amendment

200

Name one agent of socialization.

Family, school, media, peers

200

This 1965 law aimed to eliminate racial discrimination in voting.

Voting Rights Act

200

When the media decides which stories to highlight, influencing what the public thinks is important, this is called:

Agenda setting

300

What theory argues people give up some freedoms for protection?

Social contract theory

300

What system divides power among branches?

Separation of powers


300

What type of federalism keeps state and national powers separate?

Dual federalism

300

What term describes applying the Bill of Rights to states?

Incorporation


300

What constitutional clause is used to challenge discrimination by the government?

Equal Protection Clause

300

What ideology supports government intervention for equality?

Liberalism

300

This term describes the percentage of eligible voters who actually cast a ballot in an election.

Voter turnout

300

When the same news story is presented differently to influence how people interpret it, this is called:

Framing

400

What is the difference between direct and representative democracy?

Direct = citizens vote on laws; Representative = elect leaders

400

What prevents one branch from becoming too powerful?

Checks and balances

400

What type of federalism emphasizes collaboration between governments?

Cooperative federalism

400

Which amendments protect rights of the accused?

4th–8th Amendments

400

What 1964 law banned discrimination?

Civil Rights Act

400

What is the process by which media shapes how people interpret political issues?

Framing

400

A state requires voters to present a government-issued ID at the polls. Critics argue this disproportionately impacts low-income and minority voters. What type of law is this?

Voter ID law

400

A news outlet repeatedly emphasizes crime in a city, leading viewers to believe crime is rising—even when data shows it is stable. What media effect is this?

Priming or agenda setting

500

Which philosopher believed government should protect natural rights?

John Locke

500

Who opposed ratification and wanted a Bill of Rights?

Anti-Federalists

500

What is the term for shifting power back to states?

Devolution

500

What is the ongoing tension between liberty and what?

Security

500

What policy aims to address inequality in opportunities?

Affirmative action

500

Why is polling often inaccurate?

Sampling issues, bias, nonresponse

500

Young voters consistently participate in elections at lower rates than older voters. Name one structural or social factor that helps explain this trend.

Examples: less political engagement, fewer resources, registration barriers, lower mobilization

500

Social media allows anyone to share political information instantly, but often without fact-checking. What is one major risk this creates for democracy?

Examples: misinformation, polarization, echo chambers, fake news

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