Law Ch. 1, 2
Criminal laws
-regulate public conduct and have penalties such as, imprisonment, fines, or court supervision. -brought by the government against the defendend
Civil laws
-regulate relations between individuals -brought by the person harmed against the defendent
Reservations
A legal way of making a provision less enforceable than it might otherwise be.
Agencies
Develop regulations
Sources of law
Laws are based on moral, economic, political, or social values.
Defendent
The person accused of committing the crime
Plaintiff
The person harmed
Why do we have laws?
Without laws, there would be disorder and confusion. They intend to protect people and resolve conflicts in every day life.
Civil action
a lawsuit that is brought by a person who feels wronged or injured by another person
state legislatures
between state and federal government, has broader power to legislate
precedents
court decisions establishing legal principles
checks and balances
each branch has a power to restrain the other branches.
ordinances
law made by local governments
statutes
laws made by legislatures
extradition
one government asks another to hand over a suspected or convicted criminal.
federalism
powers are reserved for the states
drafting
process of writing the actual language of a bill
Bills
proposed laws
supremacy clause
provision that requires that the U.S. Constitution and federal laws are a higher authority than state laws
What is law?
rules and regulations made and enforced by government that regulate the conduct of people within a society.
legislative intent
the purpose for which a statute is enacted