ap gov ch 1 vocab
Democracy
a means of selecting policymakers and of organizing government so that policy represents and responds to the public's preferences
Elite and class theory
argues that society is divided along class lines and that an upper-class elite rules on the basis of its wealth
Pluralist theory
argues that there are many centers of influence in which groups compete with one another for control over public policy through bargaining and compromise
Hyperpluralism
argues that too many strong influential groups cripple the government's ability to make coherent policy by dividing government and its authority
collective goods
goods and services (clean air+clean water) that cannot be denied to anyone
Single-issue group
groups so concerned with one matter that their members cast their votes on the basis of that issue only
Policymaking system
institutions of government designed to respond to each other and to the priorities of the people by governmental action
Policymaking institutions
institutions such as Congress, the presidency, and the courts established by the Constitution to make policy
Linkage institutions
institutions such as parties, elections, interest groups, and the media, which provide a linkage between the preferences of citizens and the government's policy agenda
Government
institutions that make public policy for a society
political culture
overall set of values widely shared within a society
Public policy
choice that government makes in response to some issue on its agenda
Minority rights
protecting the rights and freedoms of the minority in choosing among policy alternatives
policy impacts
the effects a policy has on people and problems. impacts are analyzed to see how well a policy has met its goal and at what cost
Policy agenda
the list of subjects or problems to which people inside and outside government are paying serious attention at any given time
Representation
the relationship between the leaders and the followers
Politics
determines whom we select as our government leaders and what policies they pursue; in other words, who gets what, when, and how
Gross domestic product
the total value of all goods and services produced annually by the United States
Political participation
the ways in which people get involved in politics
pluralism
theory of american democracy emphasizing that the policymaking process is very open to the participation of all groups with shared interests, with no single group usually dominating. Pluralists tend to believe that as a result, public interest generally prevails
elitism
theory of government and politics contending that an upper-class elite will hold most of the power and thus in effect run the government
Public goods
things that everyone can share
Political issue
this arises when people disagree about a problem or about public policy choices made to combat a problem
Majority rule
weighing the desires of the majority in choosing among policy alternatives
Policy gridlock
where each interest uses its influence to thwart policies it opposes so that no coalition forms a majority to establish policy