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Magruder's American Government: 1. Foundations of Government and Citizenship

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  1. government
    the organization that is in charge of a political unit
    Government is the institution through which a society makes and enforces its public policies.
  2. legislative
    relating to a lawmaking assembly
    Every government has and exercises three basic kinds of power: (1) legislative power—the power to make laws and to frame public policies; (2) executive power—the power to execute, enforce, and administer laws; and (3) judicial power—the power to interpret laws, to determine their meaning, and to settle disputes that arise within the society.
  3. executive
    having the function of carrying out plans or orders
    Every government has and exercises three basic kinds of power: (1) legislative power—the power to make laws and to frame public policies; (2) executive power—the power to execute, enforce, and administer laws; and (3) judicial power—the power to interpret laws, to determine their meaning, and to settle disputes that arise within the society.
  4. judicial
    relating to the administration of justice
    Every government has and exercises three basic kinds of power: (1) legislative power—the power to make laws and to frame public policies; (2) executive power—the power to execute, enforce, and administer laws; and (3) judicial power—the power to interpret laws, to determine their meaning, and to settle disputes that arise within the society.
  5. dictatorship
    a form of government in which the ruler is unconstrained
    The ultimate responsibility for the exercise of these powers may be held by a single person or by a small group, as in a dictatorship.
  6. democracy
    a political system in which power lies in a body of citizens
    When the responsibility for the exercise of these powers rests with a majority of the people, that form of government is known as a democracy.
  7. state
    a politically organized body under a single government
    The state can be defined as a body of people, living in a defined territory, organized politically (that is, with a government), and with the power to make and enforce law without the consent of any higher authority.
  8. sovereign
    not controlled by outside forces
    Every state is sovereign—that is, it has supreme and absolute power within its own territory and can decide its own foreign and domestic policies.
  9. autocracy
    a political system governed by a single individual
    An autocracy is a government in which a single person holds unlimited political power.
  10. oligarchy
    a political system governed by a few people
    An oligarchy is a government in which the power to rule is held by a small, usually self-appointed elite.
  11. unitary
    of a government in which power is held by one authority
    A unitary government is often described as a centralized government.
  12. federal
    of a government with central and regional authorities
    A federal government is one in which the powers of government are divided between a central government and several local governments.
  13. confederation
    a union of political organizations
    A confederation is an alliance of independent states.
  14. parliament
    a legislative assembly in certain countries
    In a parliamentary government, the executive branch is made up of the prime minister or premier, and that official’s cabinet. The prime minister and cabinet are themselves members of the legislative branch, the parliament.
  15. patrician
    a member of the aristocracy
    Much of the political history of the republican period revolved around an often violent struggle between two social classes: the patricians, mostly rich upper-class, landowning aristocrats; and the plebeians, the common folk.
  16. plebeian
    one of the common people
    Much of the political history of the republican period revolved around an often violent struggle between two social classes: the patricians, mostly rich upper-class, landowning aristocrats; and the plebeians, the common folk.
  17. feudalism
    the social system in which vassals were protected by lords
    Feudalism was a loosely organized system in which powerful lords divided their lands among other, lesser lords.
  18. sovereignty
    royal authority
    The state, in the person of the monarch, now had sovereignty, or the utmost authority in decision making and in maintaining order.
  19. legitimacy
    lawfulness by virtue of being authorized
    This consent is known as legitimacy, the belief of the people that a government has the right to make public policy.
  20. divine right of kings
    the belief that a monarch's power to rule was ordained by God
    One type of traditional legitimacy is known as the divine right of kings. For hundreds of years, European monarchs based their right to rule on this belief that God had granted them that authority.
  21. colonialism
    exploitation by a stronger country of a weaker one
    Beginning in the late 1400s and early 1500s, several European monarchies embarked on a policy of colonialism—the control of one nation over lands abroad.
  22. mercantilism
    a system of increasing wealth through colonization and trade
    Mercantilism is an economic and political theory emphasizing money as the chief source of wealth to increase the absolute power of the monarchy and the nation.
  23. majority rule
    the doctrine that the numerical majority of an organized group can make decisions binding on the whole group
    The only satisfactory device democracy knows is that of majority rule. Democracy holds that a majority will be right more often than it will be wrong, and that the majority will also be right more often than any one person or small group will.
  24. compromise
    an accommodation in which both sides make concessions
    Compromise is the process of blending and adjusting competing views and interests.
  25. citizen
    a native or naturalized member of a state
    A citizen is one who holds both rights and responsibilities in a state.
  26. free enterprise
    an economy relying on market forces to allocate resources
    The American economic system is often called the free enterprise system. It is an economic system characterized by the private ownership of capital goods; investments made by private decision, not by government directive; and success or failure determined by competition in the marketplace.
Created on Thu May 27 15:35:04 EDT 2021 (updated Thu Jun 10 14:22:13 EDT 2021)

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