Deck 11: Law, Social Change, and the Class Struggle

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Question
According to the text, small and isolated cultures are like small and isolated gene pools-they tend toward:

A) normality
B) comfort
C) equilibrium
D) change
Use Space or
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to flip the card.
Question
Which of the following describes the law as a cause of social change?

A) historically, the law has played only a minor role in social change
B) the role of law has increased hugely over the past two centuries
C) at times, the law, as an independent source of power, functions as the instrument of social change
D) all of the above
Question
There is a tendency to view law as a _______________ to change because it consists for the most part of norms and customs that have been codified.

A) drive
B) barrier
C) reaction
D) dependent
Question
The United States today is a _______________ stew of many different cultural traditions and customs.

A) homogenous
B) homoplastic
C) homologous
D) heterogeneous
Question
Law based on universalistic principles of justice, not the customs of one particular subset of society that are defended by _______________, should regulate social behavior.

A) positive law
B) natural law
C) cultural law
D) pluralist law
Question
According to the text, we must remember that law is not a(n) _______________ phenomenon; it is an integral and inextricable part of culture and society.

A) reciprocal
B) isolated
C) natural
D) positive
Question
It may be considered that the role of law in social change is to be most often _______________ rather than causative; that is, it serves as a conduit guiding the progress of some reform that is already in the works for other reasons.

A) continuous
B) reciprocal
C) natural
D) facilitative
Question
Charles Tilly (2004) makes a case for which American event as a series of small social movements for limited reforms being largely ignored until they coalesced into violent revolution?

A) Civil War
B) Battle of the Alamo
C) American Revolution
D) Vietnam War
Question
Once a social movement is observed successfully making its rights claim, other previously silent groups are aroused in what has been called a(n) _______________ effect.

A) movement
B) antipathy
C) contagion
D) social change
Question
What functions to legitimize change, to smooth the way, and to grease the squeaky wheels of opposition to change?

A) social change
B) activism
C) norms
D) law
Question
Which British act was designed to eliminate illegal trade of a specific product between the colonies and the French and Spanish West Indies?

A) Sugar Act
B) Proclamation Act
C) Mutiny Act
D) Stamp Act
Question
Which of the following famous slavery cases may have been instrumental in propelling the more reluctant southern states into revolution?

A) Scott v. Sandford
B) Somerset v. Stewart
C) Joseph Knight v. Wedderburn
D) both b and c
Question
Which event established the principle that the English constitution, not the monarch, was sovereign?

A) American Revolution
B) Glorious Revolution
C) the Crusades
D) Monmouth Rebellion
Question
According to the text, a student of the history and political development of the United States is well advised to study:

A) the U.S. Constitution
B) its laws
C) political science
D) history
Question
There have been ___________ Soviet constitutions since 1918.

A) one
B) three
C) five
D) seven
Question
The 27 amendments to the U.S. Constitution have occurred over more than ___________ years.

A) 100
B) 150
C) 200
D) 250
Question
Soviet leaders went to great lengths to make Soviet policy-making conform to ___________ processes so that their social experiments would be perceived in the West as legitimate.

A) formal irrationality
B) formal rationality
C) substantive irrationality
D) substantive rationality
Question
The use of vague concepts like "counter-revolutionary" and "enemy of the people" allowed the Soviets to create "instant" offenses not designated as crimes in any penal code which, under the common law concept of ___________, is an expressly forbidden practice.

A) mens rea
B) legalism
C) corpus delecti
D) ex post facto
Question
The Soviets were committed to destroying the "_______________ family," declaring it was based on the "paternalistic" notion of property-based marriage that exploited women.

A) bourgeois
B) political
C) legal
D) special
Question
Law is a much more efficient instrument of social control and social change if it relies on _______________ rather than brute coercion.

A) legitimacy
B) activism
C) norms
D) values
Question
According to the text, what is the ultimate legal authority in the United States?

A) U.S. Supreme Court
B) U.S. Congress
C) the president
D) state governments
Question
Which of the following is a constraint that limits the U.S. Supreme Court's ability to produce significant social change?

A) the bounded nature of constitutional rights
B) the Court lacks the necessary independence from other branches of government
C) the Court lacks the tools to develop policies and implement decisions for significant change
D) all of the above
Question
Under the constrained view, which constraint can be overcome by ample case precedent in the general direction of the proposed change?

A) the bounded nature of constitutional rights
B) the Court lacks the necessary independence from other branches of government
C) the Court lacks the tools to develop policies and implement decisions for significant change
D) the Court is free of election concerns
Question
Rosenberg (1991) argues that social and political events are more salient and that courts have a(n) _______________ effect on change.

A) indirect
B) canonical
C) anti-canonical
D) legitimate
Question
What type of U.S. Supreme Court decisions are reviled and widely considered to have been decided wrongly?

A) indirect
B) anti-canonical
C) legitimate
D) canonical
Question
Weber (1968) used which term to refer to the legitimate power to gain compliance with rules despite the lack of objective means to compel it?

A) power
B) legitimacy
C) authority
D) jurisprudence
Question
____________ has a powerful hold on the psychology of people; they obey this type of authority because it is often invested with a kind of quasi-divine inspiration and perhaps because "it has always been there."

A) tradition
B) charisma
C) rational-legal
D) monarchical
Question
The refusal of the U.S. Supreme Court to allow television cameras behind the "purple curtain," their refusal to grant interviews, and their affected, haughty, and imperious demeanor all contribute to that special impression of priestly:

A) rationality
B) traditionalism
C) charisma
D) otherworldliness
Question
The U.S. Supreme Court did not assert the power of judicial review until Chief Justice John Marshall explored the Court's power in this regard in which case?

A) Marbury v. Madison
B) Chisolm v. Georgia
C) Marbury v. Massachusetts
D) Chisolm v. North Carolina
Question
What asserts that judges must not place their own interpretations on the U.S. Constitution, even if by adhering to this philosophy the consequences would be personally abhorrent to them?

A) judicial activism
B) strict constructionism
C) judicial plutocracy
D) strict moralism
Question
Strict constructionists look for "_____________," meaning that they will peruse relevant material in an effort "to discover what the collective intention of the Framers was on disputed matters of interpretation".

A) original activism
B) original change
C) original relevance
D) original intent
Question
Strict constructionists believe that any stance other than strict constructionism leads to:

A) strict moralism
B) judicial activism
C) social change
D) judicial moralism
Question
What is often viewed as synonymous with the point of view that the U.S. Constitution should be a "living, breathing document"?

A) judicial moralism
B) judicial activism
C) strict moralism
D) social change
Question
Adherents of a "living" Constitution tend to be:

A) liberals
B) conservatives
C) moderates
D) libertarians
Question
What makes constitutions "____________" is the fact that they are collections of documents and traditions added to over the centuries, and their flexibility makes them quickly responsive to evolving conditions and concerns.

A) active
B) written
C) living
D) change
Question
Democratic governments everywhere have encouraged all of the following EXCEPT:

A) the formation of trade unions
B) the local control of police and militia
C) the regulation of business
D) a progressive income tax
Question
What was the six-month-long armed insurrection among Massachusetts farmers that was led by a Revolutionary War veteran that occurred just prior to the signing of the Constitution in 1787 and is thought to have crystallized the anti-democratic sentiments of the Framers?

A) Shays' Rebellion
B) Bacon's Rebellion
C) Nat Turner's Rebellion
D) Sagebrush Rebellion
Question
Which clause of the U.S. Constitution, forbidding states to pass any laws "impairing the obligation of contracts," has the U.S. Supreme Court relied heavily upon in its battle to protect the economic elite from the demands of workers?

A) Article I, Section 10
B) Article I, Section 11
C) Article II, Section 10
D) Article II, Section 11
Question
Which amendment was viewed by the U.S. Supreme Court as requiring state conformity with the Bill of Rights in economic matters?

A) Fourteenth
B) Eleventh
C) Tenth
D) Seventh
Question
What was the name given to the army of unemployed workers who marched on Washington demanding job creation in the 1890s?

A) Kidd's Army
B) Coxey's army
C) Hayes' Army
D) Machinist's Army
Question
Passed by Congress in 1890, which act was designed to place controls on business?

A) Wagner Act
B) Sherman Antitrust Act
C) Norris-La Guardia Act
D) Agricultural Adjustments Act
Question
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court rule that the Sherman Act controlled only commerce, that manufacturing was not commerce, and that therefore manufacturing monopolies did not violate the act?

A) United States v. E. C. Knight
B) Adair v. United States
C) Fletcher v. Peck
D) In re Debs
Question
What are contracts forced on employees requiring them to promise not to join a union as a condition of employment?

A) collective contracts
B) cooperative contracts
C) yellow dog contracts
D) conjunctive contracts
Question
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court strike down federal legislation aimed at child labor reform, which would have cost business dearly, on the grounds that the law went beyond congressional power to regulate interstate commerce?

A) Adkins v. Children's Hospital
B) Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States
C) Loewe v. Lawlor
D) Hammer v. Dagenhart
Question
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court strike down an act of Congress setting minimum wages for women and children as an unconstitutional violation of freedom of contract?

A) Hammer v. Dagenhart
B) Adkins v. Children's Hospital
C) Louisville Bank v. Radford
D) Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States
Question
Although the courts have since reasserted this power, under which 1932 act did Congress strip the federal courts of their power to issue injunctions against labor unions engaged in labor disputes?

A) Norris-La Guardia Act
B) Sherman Antitrust Act
C) Agricultural Adjustments Act
D) Wagner Act
Question
Which act legalized labor unions and required employers to engage in good-faith collective bargaining?

A) Agricultural Adjustments Act
B) Norris-La Guardia Act
C) Sherman Antitrust Act
D) Wagner Act
Question
In which 1937 case did the U.S. Supreme Court declare the Wagner Act constitutional?

A) Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust Company
B) National Labor Relations Board v. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation
C) National Labor Relations Board v. Bildisco & Bildisco
D) Allied Structural Steel v. Spannous
Question
Which case is NOT among the important cases heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1895 in which the Court struck blows to each of the three principle reform activities employed by democratic governments everywhere?

A) Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust
B) United States v. Butler
C) In Re Debs
D) United States v. E. C. Knight
Question
According to the text, legal and political equality are natural equalities due to us by virtue of our:

A) society
B) humanity
C) abilities
D) intelligence
Question
According to the text, _____________ is unfair, since under the principles of distributive justice "superior" people will receive more benefits as a result of being blessed with a natural superiority they did nothing to deserve.

A) capitalist meritocracy
B) capitalist plutocracy
C) capitalist aristocracy
D) capitalist democracy
Question
What appeals to our moral sentiments because it is a process by which we expect to "make things right"?

A) sensibility
B) fairness
C) care
D) love
Question
A society concerned with ____________ knows that nature does not produce a state of equality, and to try to artificially produce one would involve a powerful state apparatus to force one group (the productive taxpayer) to further the goals of another (the tax consumer) without the former's consent.

A) fairness
B) equality
C) justice
D) liberty
Question
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court set the stage for its jurisdiction over state legislatures, an exercise in power stoutly resisted by the states?

A) Fletcher v. Peck
B) Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust Company
C) Allied Structural Steel v. Spannous
D) Martin v. Hunter's Lessee
Question
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court rule that under Article VI of the U.S. Constitution, the Court had the final word over all federal and state courts, a decision that was to become the keystone of federal judicial power?

A) McCulloch v. Maryland
B) Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust Company
C) Gibbons v. Ogden
D) Martin v. Hunter's Lessee
Question
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court rule that Congress could charter a national bank and that the individual states could not tax it, thus providing for an instrument of national economic stability while at the same time limiting the sovereignty of the states vis-à-vis the federal government?

A) Gibbons v. Ogden
B) Fletcher v. Peck
C) McCulloch v. Maryland
D) Engel v. Vitale
Question
The Scott v. Sandford decision:

A) caused the Civil War
B) declared the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional
C) held that slavery was unconstitutional
D) split the Republican Party and gave the 1860 election to the Democrats
Question
The U.S. Supreme Court became a major catalyst of social change under the leadership of which chief justice from 1953 to 1969?

A) Earl Warren
B) Warren Burger
C) John Marshall
D) Roger B. Taney
Question
Which U.S. Supreme Court case is canonical and has been called "the single most honored opinion in the Supreme Court's opus"?

A) Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
B) Engel v. Vitale
C) Gibbons v. Ogden
D) McCulloch v. Maryland
Question
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court ban prayer in public schools?

A) West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish
B) McCulloch v. Maryland
C) Gibbons v. Ogden
D) Engel v. Vitale
Question
Social change may be defined as any relatively enduring alteration in social relationships, behavior patterns, values, norms, and attitudes occurring over time.
Question
Norms and customs, almost by definition, are resistant to fracture.
Question
There is an isolated relationship between law and social change.
Question
Once a social movement is observed successfully making its rights claim, other previously silent groups are aroused in what has been called a contagion effect.
Question
The Mutiny Act required colonists to provision and maintain the British army.
Question
As discussed in the book, the Soviets used law to force social change.
Question
The Articles of Confederation has served as a set of guiding principles for the role of law in social change throughout American history.
Question
In the Soviet Union, legal decisions often were made by lower courts on an ad hoc basis to conform to the will of the Communist Party.
Question
One of the Soviet Union's most significant attempted changes involved the family.
Question
The president is the ultimate source of law in the United States.
Question
Under the constrained view, only a limited number of issues can come before the U.S. Supreme Court because the Court lacks the necessary independence from other branches of government.
Question
U.S. Supreme Court decisions that are anti-canonical are reviled and widely considered to have been decided wrongly.
Question
Legitimacy is the ability to command compliance with rules despite the lack of objective means to compel it.
Question
Weber (1968) used the term "authority" to refer to the legitimate power to gain compliance with rules despite the lack of objective means to compel it.
Question
The U.S. Supreme Court enjoys rational-legal, charismatic, and traditional authority.
Question
Charismatic authority is derived from rules rationally and legally enacted.
Question
A strict constructionist believes that moral concerns are the business of the courts.
Question
Judicial activism is looking for the Framer's "original intent".
Question
Strict constructionism tend to be political conservatives.
Question
Literally meaning "law not written," a living constitution is usually termed lex non scripta.
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Deck 11: Law, Social Change, and the Class Struggle
1
According to the text, small and isolated cultures are like small and isolated gene pools-they tend toward:

A) normality
B) comfort
C) equilibrium
D) change
C
2
Which of the following describes the law as a cause of social change?

A) historically, the law has played only a minor role in social change
B) the role of law has increased hugely over the past two centuries
C) at times, the law, as an independent source of power, functions as the instrument of social change
D) all of the above
D
3
There is a tendency to view law as a _______________ to change because it consists for the most part of norms and customs that have been codified.

A) drive
B) barrier
C) reaction
D) dependent
B
4
The United States today is a _______________ stew of many different cultural traditions and customs.

A) homogenous
B) homoplastic
C) homologous
D) heterogeneous
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Law based on universalistic principles of justice, not the customs of one particular subset of society that are defended by _______________, should regulate social behavior.

A) positive law
B) natural law
C) cultural law
D) pluralist law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
According to the text, we must remember that law is not a(n) _______________ phenomenon; it is an integral and inextricable part of culture and society.

A) reciprocal
B) isolated
C) natural
D) positive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
It may be considered that the role of law in social change is to be most often _______________ rather than causative; that is, it serves as a conduit guiding the progress of some reform that is already in the works for other reasons.

A) continuous
B) reciprocal
C) natural
D) facilitative
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Charles Tilly (2004) makes a case for which American event as a series of small social movements for limited reforms being largely ignored until they coalesced into violent revolution?

A) Civil War
B) Battle of the Alamo
C) American Revolution
D) Vietnam War
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Once a social movement is observed successfully making its rights claim, other previously silent groups are aroused in what has been called a(n) _______________ effect.

A) movement
B) antipathy
C) contagion
D) social change
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
What functions to legitimize change, to smooth the way, and to grease the squeaky wheels of opposition to change?

A) social change
B) activism
C) norms
D) law
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which British act was designed to eliminate illegal trade of a specific product between the colonies and the French and Spanish West Indies?

A) Sugar Act
B) Proclamation Act
C) Mutiny Act
D) Stamp Act
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which of the following famous slavery cases may have been instrumental in propelling the more reluctant southern states into revolution?

A) Scott v. Sandford
B) Somerset v. Stewart
C) Joseph Knight v. Wedderburn
D) both b and c
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which event established the principle that the English constitution, not the monarch, was sovereign?

A) American Revolution
B) Glorious Revolution
C) the Crusades
D) Monmouth Rebellion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
According to the text, a student of the history and political development of the United States is well advised to study:

A) the U.S. Constitution
B) its laws
C) political science
D) history
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
There have been ___________ Soviet constitutions since 1918.

A) one
B) three
C) five
D) seven
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The 27 amendments to the U.S. Constitution have occurred over more than ___________ years.

A) 100
B) 150
C) 200
D) 250
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Soviet leaders went to great lengths to make Soviet policy-making conform to ___________ processes so that their social experiments would be perceived in the West as legitimate.

A) formal irrationality
B) formal rationality
C) substantive irrationality
D) substantive rationality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The use of vague concepts like "counter-revolutionary" and "enemy of the people" allowed the Soviets to create "instant" offenses not designated as crimes in any penal code which, under the common law concept of ___________, is an expressly forbidden practice.

A) mens rea
B) legalism
C) corpus delecti
D) ex post facto
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The Soviets were committed to destroying the "_______________ family," declaring it was based on the "paternalistic" notion of property-based marriage that exploited women.

A) bourgeois
B) political
C) legal
D) special
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Law is a much more efficient instrument of social control and social change if it relies on _______________ rather than brute coercion.

A) legitimacy
B) activism
C) norms
D) values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
According to the text, what is the ultimate legal authority in the United States?

A) U.S. Supreme Court
B) U.S. Congress
C) the president
D) state governments
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Which of the following is a constraint that limits the U.S. Supreme Court's ability to produce significant social change?

A) the bounded nature of constitutional rights
B) the Court lacks the necessary independence from other branches of government
C) the Court lacks the tools to develop policies and implement decisions for significant change
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Under the constrained view, which constraint can be overcome by ample case precedent in the general direction of the proposed change?

A) the bounded nature of constitutional rights
B) the Court lacks the necessary independence from other branches of government
C) the Court lacks the tools to develop policies and implement decisions for significant change
D) the Court is free of election concerns
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Rosenberg (1991) argues that social and political events are more salient and that courts have a(n) _______________ effect on change.

A) indirect
B) canonical
C) anti-canonical
D) legitimate
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What type of U.S. Supreme Court decisions are reviled and widely considered to have been decided wrongly?

A) indirect
B) anti-canonical
C) legitimate
D) canonical
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Weber (1968) used which term to refer to the legitimate power to gain compliance with rules despite the lack of objective means to compel it?

A) power
B) legitimacy
C) authority
D) jurisprudence
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
____________ has a powerful hold on the psychology of people; they obey this type of authority because it is often invested with a kind of quasi-divine inspiration and perhaps because "it has always been there."

A) tradition
B) charisma
C) rational-legal
D) monarchical
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The refusal of the U.S. Supreme Court to allow television cameras behind the "purple curtain," their refusal to grant interviews, and their affected, haughty, and imperious demeanor all contribute to that special impression of priestly:

A) rationality
B) traditionalism
C) charisma
D) otherworldliness
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The U.S. Supreme Court did not assert the power of judicial review until Chief Justice John Marshall explored the Court's power in this regard in which case?

A) Marbury v. Madison
B) Chisolm v. Georgia
C) Marbury v. Massachusetts
D) Chisolm v. North Carolina
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
What asserts that judges must not place their own interpretations on the U.S. Constitution, even if by adhering to this philosophy the consequences would be personally abhorrent to them?

A) judicial activism
B) strict constructionism
C) judicial plutocracy
D) strict moralism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Strict constructionists look for "_____________," meaning that they will peruse relevant material in an effort "to discover what the collective intention of the Framers was on disputed matters of interpretation".

A) original activism
B) original change
C) original relevance
D) original intent
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Strict constructionists believe that any stance other than strict constructionism leads to:

A) strict moralism
B) judicial activism
C) social change
D) judicial moralism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
What is often viewed as synonymous with the point of view that the U.S. Constitution should be a "living, breathing document"?

A) judicial moralism
B) judicial activism
C) strict moralism
D) social change
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Adherents of a "living" Constitution tend to be:

A) liberals
B) conservatives
C) moderates
D) libertarians
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
What makes constitutions "____________" is the fact that they are collections of documents and traditions added to over the centuries, and their flexibility makes them quickly responsive to evolving conditions and concerns.

A) active
B) written
C) living
D) change
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Democratic governments everywhere have encouraged all of the following EXCEPT:

A) the formation of trade unions
B) the local control of police and militia
C) the regulation of business
D) a progressive income tax
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
What was the six-month-long armed insurrection among Massachusetts farmers that was led by a Revolutionary War veteran that occurred just prior to the signing of the Constitution in 1787 and is thought to have crystallized the anti-democratic sentiments of the Framers?

A) Shays' Rebellion
B) Bacon's Rebellion
C) Nat Turner's Rebellion
D) Sagebrush Rebellion
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Which clause of the U.S. Constitution, forbidding states to pass any laws "impairing the obligation of contracts," has the U.S. Supreme Court relied heavily upon in its battle to protect the economic elite from the demands of workers?

A) Article I, Section 10
B) Article I, Section 11
C) Article II, Section 10
D) Article II, Section 11
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which amendment was viewed by the U.S. Supreme Court as requiring state conformity with the Bill of Rights in economic matters?

A) Fourteenth
B) Eleventh
C) Tenth
D) Seventh
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
What was the name given to the army of unemployed workers who marched on Washington demanding job creation in the 1890s?

A) Kidd's Army
B) Coxey's army
C) Hayes' Army
D) Machinist's Army
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Passed by Congress in 1890, which act was designed to place controls on business?

A) Wagner Act
B) Sherman Antitrust Act
C) Norris-La Guardia Act
D) Agricultural Adjustments Act
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 95 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court rule that the Sherman Act controlled only commerce, that manufacturing was not commerce, and that therefore manufacturing monopolies did not violate the act?

A) United States v. E. C. Knight
B) Adair v. United States
C) Fletcher v. Peck
D) In re Debs
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43
What are contracts forced on employees requiring them to promise not to join a union as a condition of employment?

A) collective contracts
B) cooperative contracts
C) yellow dog contracts
D) conjunctive contracts
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44
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court strike down federal legislation aimed at child labor reform, which would have cost business dearly, on the grounds that the law went beyond congressional power to regulate interstate commerce?

A) Adkins v. Children's Hospital
B) Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States
C) Loewe v. Lawlor
D) Hammer v. Dagenhart
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45
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court strike down an act of Congress setting minimum wages for women and children as an unconstitutional violation of freedom of contract?

A) Hammer v. Dagenhart
B) Adkins v. Children's Hospital
C) Louisville Bank v. Radford
D) Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States
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46
Although the courts have since reasserted this power, under which 1932 act did Congress strip the federal courts of their power to issue injunctions against labor unions engaged in labor disputes?

A) Norris-La Guardia Act
B) Sherman Antitrust Act
C) Agricultural Adjustments Act
D) Wagner Act
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47
Which act legalized labor unions and required employers to engage in good-faith collective bargaining?

A) Agricultural Adjustments Act
B) Norris-La Guardia Act
C) Sherman Antitrust Act
D) Wagner Act
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48
In which 1937 case did the U.S. Supreme Court declare the Wagner Act constitutional?

A) Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust Company
B) National Labor Relations Board v. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation
C) National Labor Relations Board v. Bildisco & Bildisco
D) Allied Structural Steel v. Spannous
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49
Which case is NOT among the important cases heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1895 in which the Court struck blows to each of the three principle reform activities employed by democratic governments everywhere?

A) Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust
B) United States v. Butler
C) In Re Debs
D) United States v. E. C. Knight
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50
According to the text, legal and political equality are natural equalities due to us by virtue of our:

A) society
B) humanity
C) abilities
D) intelligence
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51
According to the text, _____________ is unfair, since under the principles of distributive justice "superior" people will receive more benefits as a result of being blessed with a natural superiority they did nothing to deserve.

A) capitalist meritocracy
B) capitalist plutocracy
C) capitalist aristocracy
D) capitalist democracy
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52
What appeals to our moral sentiments because it is a process by which we expect to "make things right"?

A) sensibility
B) fairness
C) care
D) love
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53
A society concerned with ____________ knows that nature does not produce a state of equality, and to try to artificially produce one would involve a powerful state apparatus to force one group (the productive taxpayer) to further the goals of another (the tax consumer) without the former's consent.

A) fairness
B) equality
C) justice
D) liberty
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54
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court set the stage for its jurisdiction over state legislatures, an exercise in power stoutly resisted by the states?

A) Fletcher v. Peck
B) Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust Company
C) Allied Structural Steel v. Spannous
D) Martin v. Hunter's Lessee
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55
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court rule that under Article VI of the U.S. Constitution, the Court had the final word over all federal and state courts, a decision that was to become the keystone of federal judicial power?

A) McCulloch v. Maryland
B) Pollock v. Farmer's Loan and Trust Company
C) Gibbons v. Ogden
D) Martin v. Hunter's Lessee
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56
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court rule that Congress could charter a national bank and that the individual states could not tax it, thus providing for an instrument of national economic stability while at the same time limiting the sovereignty of the states vis-à-vis the federal government?

A) Gibbons v. Ogden
B) Fletcher v. Peck
C) McCulloch v. Maryland
D) Engel v. Vitale
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57
The Scott v. Sandford decision:

A) caused the Civil War
B) declared the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional
C) held that slavery was unconstitutional
D) split the Republican Party and gave the 1860 election to the Democrats
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58
The U.S. Supreme Court became a major catalyst of social change under the leadership of which chief justice from 1953 to 1969?

A) Earl Warren
B) Warren Burger
C) John Marshall
D) Roger B. Taney
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59
Which U.S. Supreme Court case is canonical and has been called "the single most honored opinion in the Supreme Court's opus"?

A) Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
B) Engel v. Vitale
C) Gibbons v. Ogden
D) McCulloch v. Maryland
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60
In which case did the U.S. Supreme Court ban prayer in public schools?

A) West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish
B) McCulloch v. Maryland
C) Gibbons v. Ogden
D) Engel v. Vitale
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61
Social change may be defined as any relatively enduring alteration in social relationships, behavior patterns, values, norms, and attitudes occurring over time.
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62
Norms and customs, almost by definition, are resistant to fracture.
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63
There is an isolated relationship between law and social change.
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64
Once a social movement is observed successfully making its rights claim, other previously silent groups are aroused in what has been called a contagion effect.
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65
The Mutiny Act required colonists to provision and maintain the British army.
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66
As discussed in the book, the Soviets used law to force social change.
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67
The Articles of Confederation has served as a set of guiding principles for the role of law in social change throughout American history.
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68
In the Soviet Union, legal decisions often were made by lower courts on an ad hoc basis to conform to the will of the Communist Party.
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69
One of the Soviet Union's most significant attempted changes involved the family.
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70
The president is the ultimate source of law in the United States.
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71
Under the constrained view, only a limited number of issues can come before the U.S. Supreme Court because the Court lacks the necessary independence from other branches of government.
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72
U.S. Supreme Court decisions that are anti-canonical are reviled and widely considered to have been decided wrongly.
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73
Legitimacy is the ability to command compliance with rules despite the lack of objective means to compel it.
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74
Weber (1968) used the term "authority" to refer to the legitimate power to gain compliance with rules despite the lack of objective means to compel it.
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75
The U.S. Supreme Court enjoys rational-legal, charismatic, and traditional authority.
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76
Charismatic authority is derived from rules rationally and legally enacted.
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77
A strict constructionist believes that moral concerns are the business of the courts.
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78
Judicial activism is looking for the Framer's "original intent".
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79
Strict constructionism tend to be political conservatives.
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80
Literally meaning "law not written," a living constitution is usually termed lex non scripta.
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