Posc 150 exam #2 university of delaware
amicus curiae briefs
"friend of the court" documents filed by interested parties to encourage the court to grant or deny certiorari or to urge it to decide a case in a particular way
district courts
-lowest level of the federal court system, distributed based on population - have original jurisdiction over all cases - both criminal and civil law cases
Bureaucratic culture
1) policy commitment 2) identification with the agency 3) specialization and expertise 4) adoption o bureaucratic behavior the accepted values and procedures of an organization
organization of the Federal Bureaucracy
1. cabinet-level departments 2. independent agencies 3. regulatory boards and commissions 4. government corporations
how members of the supreme court are selected
1. merit 2. political ideology 3. Reward - personally nominated by pres 4. representation
executive office of the president
9 organizations that help the president with policy and political objectives
Rep tape
The complex procedures and regulations surrounding bureaucratic activity
Neutral competence
The principle that bureaucracy should be depoliticized (take the politics out of it) by making it more professional. - should be neutral, administering the laws of the land in a fair, evenhanded, efficient, and professional way.
select committee
a committee to deal with the problems a standing committee wont - temporary
jurisdiction
a courts authority to hear certain cases
judicial interpretivism
a judicial approach holding that the constitution is a living document and that judges should interpret it according to changing times and values - opposite of constructionism
strict constructionism
a judicial approach holding that the constitution should be read literally, with the framers' intentions uppermost in mind
Privacy Act of 1974
a law that gives citizens access to the government' files on them
civil-law tradition
a legal system based on a detailed comprehensive legal code, usually created by the legislature
Common-law tradition
a legal system based on the accumulated rulings of judges over time, applied uniformly- judge-made law
cabinet
a presidential advisory group selected by the president, made up of the vice president, the heads of the federal executive departments, and other high officials to whom the president elects to give the cabinet status
presidential veto
a presidents authority to reject a bill passed by congress; may be overridden only by a 2/3 majority in each house
precedent
a previous decision or ruling, that in common-law tradition, is binding on subsequent decisions
agency capture
a process whereby regulatory agencies come to be protective of and influenced by the industries they were established to regulate
appeal
a rehearing of a case b/c the losing party in the original trial argues that a point of law was not applied properly
state of union address
a speech given annually by the president to a joint session of congress and to the nation announcing the presidents agenda
Patronage
a system in which a successful candidate rewards friends, contributors, and party loyalists for their support - with contracts, jobs, and favors.
cloture
a vote to end a senate filibuster; requires a 3/5 majority, or 60 votes
Bureaucracy
an organization characterized by hierarchical structure, worker specialization, explicit rules and advancement by merit
bureaucratic discretion
bureaucrats' use of their own judgment in interpreting and carrying out the laws of congress
citizen advisory councils
citizen groups that consider the policy decisions of an agency; a way to make the bureaucracy responsive to the general public.
executive orders
clarifications of congressional policy issued by the president and having the full force of law
joint committee
combined house-senate committees formed to coordinate activities and expedite legislation in a certain area
government corporations
companies created by congress to provide to the public a good or service that private enterprise cannot or will not profitably provide
issue networks
complex systems of relationships among groups that influence policy, including elected leaders, interest groups, specialists , consultants, and research institutes
concurring opinions (if they agree with the general opinion)
documents written by justices expressing agreement with the majority ruling but describing different or additional reasons for the ruling
dissenting opinions
documents written by justices expressing disagreement with the majority rule
congressional oversight
efforts by congress, especially through committees, to monitor agency rule making, enforcement, and implementation of congressional policies
article 3 section 1
establishment of the court system
legislative liaison
executive personnel who work with members of congress to secure their support in getting a presidents legislation passed
treaties
formal agreements with other countries; negotiated by the president and requiring approval by 2/3 of the senate
writs of certiorari
formal requests by the US supreme court to call up the lower court case it decides to hear on appeal
independent agencies
government organization independent of the departments
independent regulatory boards and commissions
government organizations that regulate various businesses, industries, or economic sectors
Clientele groups
groups of citizens whose interests are affected by the agency or a department and who work to influence its policies. - are sensitive to the groups rather than the public
whistleblowers
individuals who publicize instances of fraud corruption, or other wrongdoing in the bureaucracy
courts
institutions that sit as neutral 3rd parties to resolve conflicts according to the law
administrative law
law established by the bureaucracy, on behalf of congress
statutory law
law passed by a state or the federal legislature ex. wear seat belts, pay taxes
constitutional law
law stated in the constitution or in the body of judicial decisions about the meaning of the constitution handed down in the courts
criminal law
laws prohibiting behavior the government has determined to be harmful to society; violation of a criminal law is called a crime
civil laws
laws regulating interactions b/w individuals, violation of a civil law is called a tort.
procedural laws
laws that establish how laws are applied and enforced -- how legal proceedings take place
substantive laws
laws whose content, or substance , defines what we can or cannot do
Sunshine laws
legislation opening the process of bureaucratic policymaking to the public - meetings of policy makers are open to the public
regulations
limitations or restrictions on the activities of a business or an individual
Civil service
nonmilitary employees of the government who are appointed through the merit system
Departments
one of the major subdivisions of the federal government, represented in the presidents cabinet
divided government
one party controls the white house, and one controls congress
standing committee
permanent committees responsible for legislation in particular policy areas ex. budget, small business, finance
Executive agreements
presidential arrangements with other countries that create foreign policy without the need for senate approval - get around senate approval
inherent powers
presidential powers implied but not states explicitly in the constitution
procedural due process
procedural laws that protect the rights of individuals who must deal with the legal system
Pendleton Act (civil service reform act of 1883)
required the hiring and promoting of civil servants to be based on merit, not patronage
conference committees
temporary committes formed to reconcile differences in house and senate versions of bill
Hatch Act
the 1939 law that limited the political involvement of civil servants to protect them from political pressure and keep politics out of the bureaucracy
freedom of information act (FOIA)
the 1966 law that allows citizens to obtain copies of most public records
Spoils system
the 19th century practice of firing government workers of a defeated party and replacing them with loyalists of the victorious party
head of state
the apolitical, unifying role of the president as symbolic representative of the whole country
original jurisdiction
the authority of a court to hear a case first - doesn't have to be heard by another court first -limited to cases that concern ambassadors and public ministers and to cases in which state is a party
appellate jurisdiction (appeal)
the authority of a court to review decisions made by lower courts - state level
traditional presidency
the founders vision of limited executive power
expectations gap
the gap between the popular expectations of what modern presidents can and should do, and their constitutional powers to get things done
solicitor general
the justice department officer who argues the governments cases before the Supreme Court
Marbury v madison
the landmark case that established the US supreme courts power of judicial review
bureaucratese
the often unintelligible language used by bureaucrats to avoid controversy and lend weight to their words
office of management and budget
the organization within the EOP that oversees the budgets of departments and agencies
iron triangles
the phenomenon of a clientele group, congressional committee, and bureaucratic agency cooperating to make mutually beneficial policy
head of government
the political role of the president as leader of a political party and chief arbiter of who gets what resources
judicial review
the power of the courts to determine the constitutionality of laws - john marshall
cycle effect
the predictable rise and fall of the presidents popularity at different stages of a term in office
Chief administrator
the president's executive role as the head of federal agencies and the person responsible for the implementation of national policy
power to persuade
the presidents ability to convince congress, other political actors and the public to cooperate with administrations agenda
chief foreign policy maker
the presidents executive role as the primary shaper of relations with other nations
commander-in-chief
the presidents role as the top officer of the country's military establishment
Accountability
the principle that the bureaucratic employees should be answerable for their performance to supervisors, all the way up the chain of command
federal register
the publication containing all federal regulations and notifications of regulatory agency hearings
legislative agenda
the slate of proposals and issues that representatives think it worthwhile to consider and act on
senatorial courtesy
the tradition of granting senior senators of the president's party considerable power over the federal judicial appointments in their home states
modern presidency
the trend toward a higher degree of executive power since the 1930s
rule of 4
the unwritten requirement that 4 of the supreme court justices must agree to grant a case certiorari in order for the case to he heard
judicial activism
the view that the courts should be lawmaking, policymaking bodies - like making decisions that shape government policy
judicial restraint
the view that the courts should reject any active lawmaking functions and stick to judicial interpretations of the pass - stare decisis
opinion
the written decision of the court that states the judgement of the majority
inquisitorial system
trial procedures designed to determine the truth through the intervention of an active judge who seeks evidence and questions witnesses - "who did it"
adversarial system
trial procedures designed to resolve conflict through the clash of opposing sides, moderated by neutral passive judge who applies the law - judge's role does NOT include being a truth seeker -designed to determine whether an accused person is guilty