Constitutional Compromises & Convention
Key Powers & Clauses
Theories & Ideologies
Federalism in Action
Foundations & Landmark Concepts

100

The Great (Connecticut) Compromise  

 This compromise created a bicameral legislature to satisfy both large and small states.

100

Necessary and Proper Clause / Elastic Clause

This clause gives Congress the power to make all laws "necessary and proper" for carrying out its enumerated powers.

100

Popular Sovereignty

The idea that government is created by and subject to the will of the people.

100

Federalism

The constitutional system that divides power between a national government and state governments.

100

Declaration of Independence

The document that formally announced the American colonies' break from Great Britain

200

Shay's Rebellion

This event demonstrated the weakness of the Articles of Confederation and spurred the call for the Constitutional Convention

200

Enumerated or Expressed Powers

These are powers specifically listed in the Constitution for the federal government.

200

Pluralist Theory)

The theory that political power is distributed among many competing interest groups.

200

McCulloch v. Maryland

This landmark case established the principle of implied powers and upheld the constitutionality of the national bank.

200

Federalist Papers

A series of essays written to persuade New York to ratify the Constitution.

300

New Jersey Plan

This plan called for a unicameral legislature with equal representation for each state.

300

Supremacy Clause 

This clause establishes that the Constitution and federal laws are the "supreme law of the land."

300

Limited Government

The idea that a government's power should be restricted to protect individual rights.

300

Devolution

The process of returning power from the national government to the states.

300

Checks and Balances

The principle that each branch of government has the ability to limit the power of the other branches.

400

Three-Fifths Compromise

This agreement counted enslaved individuals as three-fifths of a person for representation.

400

Full Faith and Credit Clause

 This clause in Article IV requires states to recognize the public acts and records of other states.

400

Natural Rights

 Rights that people are born with, which government cannot take away.

400

Block Grant

This type of grant-in-aid gives states more flexibility in how to spend federal money.

400

Judicial Review

The power of the courts to declare laws unconstitutional.

500

Articles of Confederation

This was the initial governing document of the U.S., which created a very weak central government.

500

Commerce Clause

 This constitutional clause gives Congress the power to regulate trade between states and foreign nations.

500

Elite Theory

The theory that a small, wealthy elite class holds the most power.

500

U.S. v. Lopez

This Supreme Court case limited federal power by ruling the Gun-Free School Zones Act unconstitutional.

500

Faction


James Madison's term for a group he saw as a potential danger to the stability of a republic.