Legislatures
Executives
Bureaucracies
Judiciary
Intergovernmental Relations
200

What are the four functions of state legislatures?

Pass legislation, appropriate funds, administrative oversight, and constituency service

200

How long are governor terms in most states?

4 years

200

What is the definition of bureaucracies?

The complex structure of offices, tasks, rules, and principles of organization that is employed by all large scaled institutions to coordinate the work of their personnel

200

What is the difference between a trial court and an appellate court?

Trial courts decide guilty/liable, appellate courts review trial court proceedings for due process.

200

Define intergovernmental relations. 

Process by which the levels of government negotiate and compromise over policy responsibility

400

What are the three components of measures of state legislature professionalization?

Salary, session length, number of legislative staff

400

Do governors see their roles as problem solving/conflict resolution or setting/controlling the policy agenda?

More about problem solving/conflict resolution that agenda setting


400

What are the four responsibilities of bureaucracies? 

Implement laws, make rules, enforce laws, innovate 

400

True or False: Most states have court systems larger than the federal government court system.

False. Four states (CA, GA, NY, TX) have court systems larger than the federal court system


400

Define federalism.

Division of responsibility between national and regional (state) governments

600

What are formal powers and give one example of a formal power we discussed in class.

Formal powers are powers derived from one's legislative position. Examples include: Appointment and assignment powers, bill referral, control over legislative staff


600

We discussed 7 roles governor's play. Provide me 3.

Enforce laws

Lead the bureaucracy

Influence legislation, especially budget

State spokesperson/intergovernmental actor

Head of party

Public figure

Chief crisis manager


600

What are street level bureaucrats? 

The bureaucrats on the front line of policy implementation

600

Are judges that are elected more, less, or equally responsive to public opinion as judges who are appointed?

More responsive.


600

Who benefits most from fiscal federalism?

Poor and rural areas. 

800

Name three of the six influences on the policy-making process we discussed in class.

Vote threshold, timing, interest groups, direct democracy, governors, public opinion

800

There are 4 personal powers: Electoral mandate, Position on state political ambition ladder, Personal future of governors as governor, and Gubernatorial performance ratings. Define 2 of the 4. 


Electoral mandate- Power derived from winning by large margins

Position on state political ambition ladder- Power derived from experience and relationships gained during previous political positions

Personal future of governors as governor- Power derived from the potential of continuing to serve as governor in the future

Gubernatorial performance ratings- Power derived from receiving ratings as being a well-performing governor


800

What is one reason state legislatures delegate power to bureaucracies and one reason state legislatures would not delegate power to bureaucracies? 

Reasons to delegate: Bureaucracies staffed with policy experts; Updating laws harder than updating rules; Congress can ‘wash their hands’ of the issue.

Reasons not to delegate: Principal-agent problem- A conflict in priorities or responses between an actor and the representative authorized to act on the actor’s behalf


800

What is jurisdiction?

The power to hear/make decisions about cases


800

What are expressed, concurrent, and reserved powers?

Expressed powers- Powers specifically granted to the (federal) government

Concurrent powers- Powers shared by the federal and state governments

Reserved powers- Powers not specifically granted to the (federal) government or denied to regional governments



1000
Define the following gerrymander techniques: Packing, stacking, and cracking. 

Cracking up areas with many out-group members into multiple, less powerful districts to dilute their influence

Stacking large out-group communities into districts with more in-group members to counterbalance large-outgroup influence

Packing outgroup members into as few as districts as possible, giving them fewer seats then they should have had


1000

There are 6 institutional powers: Separately elected state level officials, The power of appointment, Tenure potential, Control over budget, Veto, Party control. Define 3 of the 6. 

Separately elected state level officials- Power derived from the extent to which other state level officials are selected by the governor 

The power of appointment- Power derived from the ability to appoint without (much) influence from other branches

Tenure potential- Power derived from the length of a governor’s term

Control over budget- Power derived from the ability of the governor to propose and amend the budget

Veto- Power derived from veto strength and veto override requirement

Party control- Power derived from extent of co-partisanship with legislature


1000

Discuss the tension between the bureaucracy, legislature, and governor in regards to how the bureaucracy operates. 

Struggle for power over bureaucracy

Legislature & Governor

The bureaucracy is created, overseen, paid for, and altered by the legislature, but operated (and organized) by governor

Bureaucracy & Governor

The bureaucracy is staffed with civil servants and experts who may have their own preferred policies, but headed by governor appointees

Bureaucracy creates rules, (some) governors can review them

Bureaucracy & Legislature

The heads of bureaucracy are is staffed with expertise and civil servants who may have their own preferred policies, but overseen by legislature


1000

We discussed 5 influences on court decisions. Describe 3.

Institutional interests/public opinion

Stare decisis/Precedent

Political ideology and partisanship

Amicus curiae (friend of the court) briefs

Interest groups

1000

Contrast dual and cooperative federalism.

Dual federalism- A form of federalism where power and authority are more starkly divided between the central and regional governments

Cooperative federalism- A form of federalism where power and authority are less starkly divided between the central and regional governments