Foundational Documents
Types of Democracy
Vocab
The Enlightenment
Bonus
100

Created a weak central Government 

Articles of Confederation

100

a model of democracy that stresses vigorous competition among various interests in a free society; no one group dominates politics

pluralist democracy

100

An armed uprising in Massachusetts (mostly in and around Springfield) during 1786 and 1787.

Shays' Rebellion

100

Wrote The Leviathan

Thomas Hobbs

100

The supreme law of the United States, outlining the structure of the national government and defining the rights and freedoms of American citizens.

US Constitution

200

A series of 85 essays written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay promoting ratification of the U.S. Constitution.

Federalist Papers 

200

A form of government in which the people select representatives to govern them and make laws.

republic

200

a group, usually within a larger group, that has different ideas and opinions than the rest of the group.

Faction

200

Wrote Second Treatise of Civil Government

John Locke

200

The first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution that protect individual liberties such as freedom of speech, religion, and press; right to bear arms; protection against unreasonable searches and seizures; etc.

The Bill of Rights 

300

An essay written as part of the Anti-Federalist Papers, in which the author raised concerns about the concentration of power in the national government and the potential for elected representatives to become an elite class, disconnected from the people they were supposed to represent.

Brutus No. 1

300

a theory of democracy that limits the citizens' role to choosing among competing leaders; elite holds power

elite democracy

300

A political system where the powers of the government are restricted by law, usually through a written constitution

Limited Government 

300

The Social Contract

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

300

 the division of powers between national and state governments, and is central to the American structure of government.

Federalism

400

Document adopted on July 4th, 1776, which announced that thirteen American colonies were no longer under British rule and had become independent states.

Declaration of Independence

400

a system of government where rank-and-file citizens rule themselves rather than electing representatives to govern on their behalf

participatory democracy

400

political ideology centered on citizenship in a state organized as a republic.

Republicanism 

400

the law of God and that this law is acknowledged through human sense and reason.

natural law

400

A principle stating that all government power comes from the people. The government exists only with consent from its citizens who are the source of all authority.

Popular Sovereignty

500

an American statesman, diplomat, expansionist, philosopher, author of Federalist 10, and Founding Father who served as the fourth president of United States from 1809-1817. He is hailed as "Father of Constitution" for his pivotal role in drafting and promoting U.S constitution, and the Bill Of Rights.

James Madison

500

A form of government where citizens vote directly on laws and policies.

Direct Democracy

500

The formal approval or acceptance of a decision, action, or plan. In the context of US Government, it often refers to the process by which proposed laws or constitutional amendments are approved and become legally binding.

Ratification

500

In this form of government, citizens elect leaders for a limited period of time; the leaders’ job is to make and execute laws in the public interest.

republicanism

500

Federal law has authority over state laws when the two are in conflict.

Supremacy Clause