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human relations Flashcards

human relations

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484633131cultureconsists of the shared products of human groups0
484633132material culturephysical objects that people create and use1
484633133nonmaterial cultureabstract human creations2
484633134societya group of interdependent people who have organized in a way that they share a common culture3
484633135technologythe combination of objects and rules4
484633136languageorganaization of written or spoken symbols used to communicate5
484633137valuesshared beliefs on what is right and wrong6
484633138normsshared rules of conduct that tell people how to act in a certain situation7
484633139folkwaysnorms that do not have a great cultural significance.8
484633140moresnorms that have a great moral significance9
484633141lawswritten rules of conduct made and enforced by the government10
484633142culture traitany individual tool, act or belief that is directly related to a specific need.11
484633143culture complexesa cluster of interrelated traits12
484633144culture patternsthe combination of a number of culture complexes inter related into a whole13
484633145cultural universalscertain features society must develop in order to ensure their fulfillment14
489013009ethnocentrismthe tendency to view one's own culture as the best culture.15
489013010cultural relativismthe thought that a person should be judge only by the standards of his or her own society.16
489013011subculturea social group within a national culture that has distinctive patterns of behavior and beliefs17
489013012counterculturea subculture that deliberately opposes certain aspects of the larger culture18
489013013George Murdockanthropologist who complied a list of over 60 cultural universals19
489013014Margaret Meadanthropologist who studied Samoa culture and decided that nurture was above nature in human emotions20
489013015Arapeshsociety in New Guinea show signs of both men and women behaving in traditional feminine way (passive & gentle).21
489013016MundugumorA Jealous, violent, tribe within New Guinea that have little other emotion but anger.22
489013017Marvin Harrisexplored the religious prohibition in india against killing cows even when food shortages exist.23
489013018Edwin Sutherlanddeveloped the differential association theory which talks about learning an excess of definition for deviance may make you more likely to be deviant24
489013019Yanomamofarmers who live in small villages along the border between Brazil and Venezuela and are very hostile.25
489013020Sanlast nomadic group of Africans before early civilization; live in Kalahari desert26
489013021Napoleon Chagnonanthropologist who studied the Yanomamo27

APUSH Ch. 16-19 Study Guide Flashcards

AP US History Chapters 16 through 19 in the American Pageant

YEAH HODGE!

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1085127194As a result of the introduction of the cotton gin, what happened?Slavery was reinvigorated0
1085127195Members of the planter aristocracy...?Dominated society and politics in the South1
1085127196Plantation agriculture was wasteful largely because...?Its excessive cultivation of cotton despoiled good land2
1085127197Describe plantation agriculture.It was economically unstable and wasteful3
1085127198German and Irish immigration to the South was discouraged by what?Competition with slave labor4
1085127199What did southern subsistence farmers raise as their main crop?Corn5
1085127200By the mid-nineteenth century... (hint: in relation to the location of slaves)Most slaves lived on large plantations6
1085127201The majority of southern whites owned no slaves because...?They could not afford the purchase price7
1085127202Some southern slaves gained their freedom as a result of what?Purchasing their way out of slavery8
1085127203The great increase of the slave population in the first half of the nineteenth century was largely due to...?Natural reproduction9
1085127204Northern attitudes toward free blacks can best be described as...?Very racist10
1085127205The profitable southern slave system did what?Hobbled the economic development of the region as a whole11
1085127206What was perhaps the slave's greatest horro, and the theme of Harriet Beecher Stowe's UNCLE TOM'S CABIN?The enforced separation of slave families12
1085127207By 1860, slaves were concentrated in the "black belt" located in the...?Deep South states of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana ((dare you to walk up to someone and ask if they're from the black belt))13
1085127208As a substitute for the wage-incentive system, slave-owners most often used the...?Whip as a motivator14
1085127209Where was forced separation of spouses, parents, and children most common?On small plantations and in the upper South15
1085127210Slaves fought the system of slavery in all of the following ways EXCEPT by...?Refusing to get an education16
1085127211As a result of white southerners' brutal treatment of their slaves and their fear of potential slave rebellions, the South...?Developed a theory of biological racial superiority17
1085127212In the pre-Civil War South, the most uncommon and least successful form of slave resistance was what?Armed insurrection18
1085127213Which one of the following has the LEAST in common with the other four?John Quincy Adams (lol no context clues)19
1085127214Match each abolitionist with his publication. A) William Lloyd Garrison B) Theodore Dwight Weld C) Frederick Douglass D) David Walker 1) *Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World* 2) *The Liberator* 3) *Narration of the Life of...* 4) *American Slavery as It Is*A) Garrison-2) *The Liberator* B) Weld-4) *American Slavery as It Is* C) Douglass-3) *Narration of the Life of...* D) Walker-1) *Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World*20
1085127215Arrange the following groups in chronological order of their founding: A) American Colonization Society, B) American Anti-Slavery Society, C) Liberty PartyA (1822) B (1833) C (1840)21
1085127216Match each abolitionist below with his role in the movement: A) Wendell Phillips B) Frederick Douglass C) Elijah P. Lovejoy 1) abolitionist martyr 2) black abolitionist 3) abolitionist orator 4) abolitionist financierA) Phillips-3) abolitionist orator B) Douglass-2) black abolitionist C) Lovejoy-1) abolition martyr22
1085127217Many abolitionists turned to politcal action in 1840 when they backed up the presidential candidate of which party?Liberty party23
1085127218The voice of white southern abolitionism fell silent at the beginning of what decade?1830s24
1085127219In arguing for the continuation of slavery after 1830, what did southerners do?Placed themselves in opposition to much of the rest of the Western world (including Western Europe and northern states, Canada, etc.)25
1085127220Those in the North who opposed the abolitionists believed that these opponents of slavery...?Were creating disorder in America26
1085127221"Varying Viewpoints" (in the American Pageant book) notes that Ulrich B. Phillips made certain claims about slavery that have been challenged in recent years. Which of the following is NOT one of his conclusions?Slavery was comparable to the Nazi concentration camps27
1085127222Why did John Tyler join the Whig party?He could not stomach the dictatorial tactics of Andrew Jackson28
1085127223Why did the Whigs place John Tyler on the 1840 ticket as vice president?To attract the vote of states' rightists29
1085127224After President John Tyler's veto of a bill to establish a new Bank of the United States...?-All but one member of his cabinet resigned -An attempt was made in the House of Representatives to impeach him -Tyler also vetoed a Whig-sponsored high-tariff bill -He was expelled from the Whig party ((Select "all of the above" on the test))30
1085127225Who was the only member of President Tyler's Whig cabinet who did not resign in protest over his policies?Daniel Webster31
1085127226The British-American dispute over the border of Maine was solved...?By a compromise that gave each side some territory32
1085127227The Aroostook War was the result of what?A dispute over the northern boundary of Maine33
1085127228Arrange the following in chronological order: A) Annexation of Texas B) Webster-Ashburton Treaty C) Settlement of the Oregon boundary D) Aroostook WarD) Aroostook War B) Webster-Ashburton Treaty C) Oregon boundary settlement A) Annexation of Texas34
1085127229One argument against annexing Texas to the US was that the annexation...?Might give more power to the supporters of slavery35
1085127230Texas was annexed to the US as a result of what?President Tyler's desire to help his troubled administration36
1085127231Arrange in chronological order the United States' acquisition of: A) Oregon B) Texas C) CaliforniaB) Texas A) Oregon C) California (girls, we're unforgettable~)37
1085127232The PRIMARY group that was instrumental in strengthening and saving American claims to Oregon were...?American missionaries to the Indians38
1085127233Most Americans who migrated to the Oregon Country were attracted by what?The rich soil of the Willamette River Valley39
1085127234In the 1840s, what was the view that God had ordained the growth of an American nation stretching across North America called?Manifest Destiny40
1085127235In the presidential election of 1844, the Whig canddate, Henry Clay...?Favored postponing the annexation of Texas41
1085127236The election of 1844 was notable because...?It was fought over numerous times42
1085127237The group most supportive of gaining control of the Oregon Country was the...?Northern Democrats43
1085127238In the Oregon treaty with Britain in 1846, the northern boundary of the US was established to the Pacific Ocean along what line?49'44
1085127239One reason that the British government decided to compromise on the Oregon Country border was...?They couldn't handle America's swag and freedom powah (The fear of war with the United States)45
1085127240Arrange the following in chronological order: A) Bear Flag revolt B) Slidell mission rejected C) Declaration of war on Mexico D) American troops ordered to the Rio Grande ValleyB) Slidell mission rejected D) American troops ordered to the Rio Grande Valley C) Declaration of war on Mexico A) Bear Flag revolt46
1085127241In 1846 the United States went to war with Mexico for all of the following reasons EXCEPT...?The impulse to satisfy those asking for "spot" resolutions47
1085127242President Polk's claim that "American blood [had been shed] on the American soil" referred to news of an armed clash between Mexican and American troops near...?The Rio Grande48
1085127243During the Mexican War, the Polk administration was called upon several times to respond to "spot" resolutions indicating where American blood had been shed to provoke the war. The resolutions were frequently introduced by...?Abraham Lincoln49
1085127244One goal of Mexico in its 1846-1848 war with the US was to...?Free black slaves50
1085127245When the war with Mexico began, President James K. Polk...?Hoped to fight a limited war, ending with the conquest of California51
1085127246Match each American officer with his theater of command in the Mexican War. A) Stephen W. Kearny B) Zachary Taylor C) Winfield Scott D) John C. Frémont 1) Northern Mexico 2) California 3) Santa Fe 4) Mexico CityA) Kearny-3) Santa Fe B) Taylor-1) Northern Mexico C) Scott-4) Mexico City D) Frémont-2) California52
1085127247The terms of the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo ending the Mexican War included...?A US payment of $15 million for the cession of northern Mexico53
1085127248The Wilmot Proviso...?Symbolized the burning issue of slavery in the territories54
1085127249The first Old World Europeans to come to California were...?Spanish55
1085127250The Spanish Franciscan missionaries treated the native inhabitants of California...?Very harshly56
1085127251In order to maintain the two great political parties as vital bonds of national unity, early-nineteenth-century politicians did what?Avoided public discussion of slavery57
1085127252What did the US's victory of the Mexican War result in?-The cession by Mexico of an enormous amount of land to the US -A possible split in the Whig and Democrat parties over slavery -Renewed controversy over the issue of extending slavery into the territories -A rush of settlers to new American territory in California ((Select 'All of the above'))58
1085127253According to the principle of "popular sovereignty", the question of slavery in the territories would be determined by...?The vote of the people in any given territory59
1085127254In the 1848 presidential election, the Democratic and Whig parties...?Remained silent on the issue of slavery60
1085127255The key issue for the major parties in the 1848 presidential election was...?Personalities61
1085127256The event that brought turmoil to the administration of Zachary Taylor was the...?Discovery of gold in California62
1085127257The Free Soilers argued that slavery...?Would cause more costly wage labor to wither away63
1085127258Why did the Free Soilers condemn slavery?It destroyed the chances of free white workers to rise to self-employment64
1085127259Describe the South by 1850.It was relatively well off, politically and economically65
1085127260John C. Calhoun's plan to protect the South and slavery involved...?The election of two presidents, one from the North and one from the South66
1085127261Daniel Webster's famed Seventh of March speech in 1850 resulted in what?A shift toward compromise in the North67
1085127262For his position in his Seventh of March speech, Daniel Webster was viciously condemned by whom?Abolitionists68
1085127263In the debates of 1850, Senator William H. Seward, as a representative of the northern Young Guard argued that...?Christian legislators must obey God's moral law69
1085127264During the debate of 1850, who argued that there was a "higher law" than the Constitution that compelled him to demand the exclusion of slavery from the territories?William H. Seward70
1085127265President Zachary Taylor unknowingly helped the cause of compromise in 1850 when he...?Died suddenly and Millard Filmore became president71
1085127266Southern delegates met at a convention in Nashville in the summer of 1850 to do what?Condemn the compromises being worked out in Congress72
1085127267In the Compromise of 1850, Congress determined that slavery in the New Mexico and Utah territories was...?To be decided by popular sovereignty73
1085127268The most alarming aspect of the Compromise of 1850 to northerners was he decision concerning what?The new Fugitive Slave Law74
1085127269The Fugitive Slave Law included all of the following provisions EXCEPT...?The requirement that fugitive slaves be returned from Canada (with maple syrup, eh?)75
1085127270In light of future evidence, it seems apparent that in the Compromise of 1850, the South made a tactical blunder by...?Demanding a strong fugitive slave law76
1085127271The election of 1852 was significant because it...?Marked the end of the Whig Party77
1085127272For a short time in the 1850s, an American seized control of...?Nicaragua (lolwut)78
1085127273The US's scheme to gain control of Cuba was stopped when...?Northern free-soilers fiercely protested the effort79
1085127274Stephen A. Douglas proposed that the question of slavery in the Kansas-Nebraska Territory be decided by what?Popular sovereignty80
1085127275Stephen A. Douglas's plans for deciding the slavery question in the Kansas-Nebraska scheme required repeal of what?The Missouri Compromise81
1085127276One of Stephen Douglas's mistakes in proposing the Kansas-Nebraska Act was...?Underestimating the depth of northern opposition to the spread of slavery82
1085127277*Uncle Tom's Cabin* may be described as...?A powerful political force83
1085127278As a result of reading Uncle Tom's Cabin, many northerners...?Swore that they would have nothing to do with the Fugitive Slave Law84
1085127279When the people of Britain and France read *Uncle Tom's Cabin*, what did their governments realize?Intervention in the Civil War on behalf of the South would not be popular85
1085127280Hinton R. Helper's book *The Impending Crisis of the South* argued that those who suffered most from slave labor were...?Non-slaveholding southern whites86
1085127281In 1855, proslavery southerners regarded Kansas as...?Slave territory87
1085127282In "Bleeding Kansas" in the mid-1850s, _________ was/were identified with the proslavery element, and ________ was/were associated with the antislavery free-soilers.The Lecompton Constitution; The New England Immigrant Aid Society88
1085127283The Lecompton Constitution proposed what about the state of Kansas?That it have black bondage regardless of whether the document was approved or not89
1085127284The clash between Preston S. Brooks and Charles Sumner revealed...?The fact that passions over slavery were becoming dangerously inflamed in both North and South90
1085127285Match each candidate in the 1856 election below with the correct party. (One candidate will not be used.) A) John C. Frémont B) Millard Filmore C) Martin Van Buren D) James Buchanan 1) Democratic 2) Republican 3) Know-NothingA) John C. Frémont-2) Republican B) Millard Fillmore-3) Know-Nothing D) James Buchanan-1) Democratic91
1085127286What was the central plank of the Know-Nothing party in the 1856 election?Nativism92
1085127287What were nativists in the 1850s known for?Their anti-Catholic and anti-foreign attitudes93
1085127288In ruling on the Dred Scott case, the US Supreme Court...?Expected to lay to rest the issue of slavery in the territories94
1085127289The decision rendered in the Dred Scott case was applauded by...?Pro-slavery southerners95
1085127290For a majority of northerners, the most outrageous part of the Supreme Court's ruling in the Dred Scott case was...?That Congress never had the power to prohibit slavery in any territory96
1085127291The panic of 1857 resulted in what?Clamor for a higher tariff97
1085127292The political career of Abraham Lincoln could best be described as...?Slow to get off the ground98
1085127293Stephen A. Douglas argued in his Freeport Doctrine during the Lincoln-Douglas debates that...?Action by territorial legislatures could keep slavery out of the territories99
1085127294In his raid on Harper's Ferry, what did John Brown intend to do?Foment a slave rebellion100
1085127295After John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry, what did the South concluded?The North was dominated by "Brown-loving" Republicans101
1085127296Abraham Lincoln won the 1860 Republican party presidential nomination in part because he...?Had made fewer enemies than front-runner William Seward102
1085127297Match each presidential candidate in the 1860 election with his party's position on the slavery question. A) Abraham Lincoln B) Stephen Douglas C) John Breckenridge D) John Bell 1) Extend slavery into the territories 2) Ban slavery from the territories 3) Preserve the Union through compromise 4) Enforce popular sovereigntyA) Lincoln-2) Ban slavery from the territories B) Douglas-4) Enforce popular sovereignty C) Breckenridge-1) Extend slavery into the territories D) Bell--3) Preserve the Union through compromise103
1085127298When Abraham Lincoln won the 1860, people in South Carolina...?Rejoiced because it gave them an excuse to secede104
1085127299The government of the Confederate States of America was first organized in...?Montgomery, Alabama105
1085127300"Lame-duck" President James Buchanan believed that...?The Constitution did not authorize him to force southern states to stay in the Union106
1085127301President James Buchanan declined to use force to keep the South in the Union for all of the following reasons EXCEPT that...?He believed that the Constitution allowed secession107
1085127302Abraham Lincoln opposed the Crittenden Compromise because...?The Compromise could allow slavery to expand into Latin America108
1085127303The immense debt owed to northern creditors by the South was...?Repudiated by the South109

AP US History- Chapter 18-19 Flashcards

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614143423balance of powerthe North and South had an equal number of states represented in the Senate and the House, and they needed to keep it that way0
614143424Wilmot Provisobanned slavery in the territory aquired in the Mexican War, supported by Northern antislaverists1
614143425Lewis Cassman who was the reputed father of popular sovereignty2
614143426John Calhounman who disagreed with Wilmot Proviso and said unconstitutional because no citizen can be told not to bring their property (slave property) into the territories3
614143427Thomas Hart Bentonman who said that seperately Wilmot and Calhoun were dull, but put together they became a pair of scissors and could cut the Union in half4
614143428popular sovereigntythe doctrine that stated that the people who lived on the territory should determine the status of slavery on their land5
614143429Free Soilparty that felt slavery was a threat to the American Dream ideal; run Van Buren in 18486
614143430Zachary Taylorrun by the Whigs in 1848, and wins because everyone loves a hero7
614143431Californiastate that explodes with people overnight because of gold rush8
614143432free stateCalifornia applied right away to become a __________9
614143433Free Soil State ConstitutionCongress must approve before a state can be declared free of slavery10
614143434Underground Railroadslaves' road to freedom11
614143435Harriet Tubman"Moses", helps lead slaves through the Underground Railroad12
614143436Fugitive Slave Lawslaws demanded by southerners to cope with runaway slaves13
614143437Compromise of 1850last hurrah for Henry Clay, John Calhoun, and Daniel Webster; huge attempt to make peace, try to please both North and South14
614143438Clay's Compromisecompromise that lets CA join as free state, NM and UT use popular sovereignty, TX borders settled and debts paid, ends slave trade in DC, and enacts new fugitive-slave laws15
614143439Californiain Clay's Compromise, _______ is admitted as a free state16
614143440New Mexico, Utahin Clay's Compromise, _______ and _____ begin using popular sovereignty17
614143441Texasin Clay's Compromise, _____'s borders are settled and debts are paid18
614143442DCin Clay's Compromise, slave trade (auction) was ended in ________19
614143443fugitive slave lawsin Clay's Compromise, new _______ came into affect and bounty hunters could bring slaves home for cash rewards20
614143444Omnibus Billthis comes out of the Webster-Calhoun Debates, different writers write parts of it, it fails21
614143445Stephen Douglasthe "Little Giant", man with a salesman-like mannerism; breaks Clay's bill into 5 different bills and makes sure they all get passed22
614143446Whigs vs. Democratsparties in the Election of 185223
614143447Franklin PierceDemocrats run this man in the Election of 1852; weak candidate, a nobody24
614143448Winfield ScottWhigs run this man in the Election of 1852, military hero25
614143449Piercewinner of Election of 185226
614143450Free Soil Partyconsists of Northern Whigs and Democrats27
614143451filibusteringprivate armies invading countries28
614143452William Walkerinvaded Nicaragua with his small army, conquered it, and became leader of Nicaragua29
614143453CubaAmerica wanted to buy this island, but Spain would not sell it to them30
614143454Ostend Manifestosecret Franklin Pierce administration proposal to purchase or to wrest militarily Cuba from Spain, opposed greatly by the North, so it was quickly abandoned31
614143455Chinathis Asian country gives America the most-favored-nation status because America wants to do business with the them, not sell them drugs (like the British); Americans flood into their country and they flood into America32
614143456Matthew Perrygoes to Japan and shows them the cannon, forces American ways in Japan33
614143457RailroadAmerica needs a new _____, but they can't decide where to put it to connect to California34
614143458Jefferson Davisproposes a railroad route from New Orleans to Los Angeles, purchases all land south of the Gila River and enables the railroad plan to go, easiest route35
614143459Gadsden Purchaseland purchased to help Jefferson Davis's railroad route36
614143460Stephen Douglaswants to run railroad route from Chicago across Mississippi to Wyoming, but very unorganized37
614143461Kansas-Nebraska ActDouglas puts this Act through Congress, divide the territory in half, call top Nebraska and bottom Kansas; use popular sovereignty, but that violates Missouri Compromise, but passes anyway38
614143462Uncle Tom's Cabinbook written by Harriet Beecher Stowe, wanted to show the North the wickedness of slavery, creates tension39
614143463Missouri Border Ruffians vs. Free State Militiaboth arm themselves and establish state capitols and declare they have won Kansas; Kansas thrown into Civil War40
614143464Missouri Border Ruffiansfor slavery in Bleeding Kansas41
614143465Free State militiaagainst slavery in Bleeding Kansas42
614143466LawrenceRuffians sack _______ (free state capitol) during Bleeding Kansas, Civil War begins in Kansas43
614143467John Brownantislavery man during Bleeding Kansas, lead his followers to Pottawatomie Creek to attack Lawrence44
614143468Pottawatomie Creekplace where John Brown leads his men to begin Kansas's Civil War45
614143469Republicannew political party, consists of angry Whigs, Free-Soilers, and Know-Nothings, party of upper-mid-west white American born; want internal improvements, free education, land in west to be free; party rises rapidly46
614143470Charles SumnerRepublican Massachusetts Senator, made comments about slavery, says he understands why the south likes to have slaves, because they like to sleep with them; beaten by Preston Brooks in front of all the Senate47
614143471Preston BrooksSouth Carolina Senator; nephew of the man Sumner accuses of sleeping with his slaves; beats Sumner in front of the whole Senate48
614143472Election of 1856Buchanan wins; Democrats vs. Republican vs. Know Nothing49
614143473James BuchananDemocratic Party runs in Election of 1856; bachelor, lawyer, out of country during Kansas-Nebrask Act50
614143474John C. FremontRepublican Party runs in Election of 1856; young, military guy involved in Mexican War, explorer51
614143475Millard FilmoreKnow-Nothing Party runs in Election of 1856; Zachary Taylor's VP, served as president when Taylor died52
614143476Dredd Scott CaseSupreme Court Case--slave sues for his freedom, brought to North by his owner and lived on free land but still held in bondage53
614143477Roger B. Tanneysays the Dredd Scott case is irrelevant because he can't sue for his freedom because proporty cannot sue their owner54
614143478Lincoln/Douglas Debatesrunning for Senate, first, Douglas wins, but then Lincoln starts to draw Douglas into talking about things that would get him into trouble and not into office--puts Douglas in a difficult position; Douglas wins but Lincoln has shown his power55
614143479Abraham Lincolnabnormally tall man, raw boned, grew up in rural Kentucky and then moved to Illinois, not much schooling but an avid reader; brilliant, worked in manual labor, read law, self-educated lawyer, circuit lawyer56
614143480Harper's FerryPotomac River, near VA, WV border; John Brown killed people to try to secure weapons, US army responded and hanged Brown (turns him into a hero and martyr)57
614143481Election of 1860whigs gone, Republicans strong, Democrats splitting58
614143482Douglas, Breckinridgein election of 1860, Democrats run ________ in the North and _______ in the South59
614143483Lincolnin election of 1860, Republicans run _______60
614143484John Bellin election of 1860, the Constitutional Party (Southern Whigs) run _________61
614143485South Carolinastate that begins all the secession in 186162
614143486Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Florida, Texasstates that follow South Carolina's secession; all cotton states63
614143487The Confederate States of AmericaMississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Florida, Texas and South Carolina all secede from the Union and become _________64
614143488Jefferson DavisThe Confederate States of America elected _______ to be their president in 186165

AP US History- Chapter 18-19 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
614143423balance of powerthe North and South had an equal number of states represented in the Senate and the House, and they needed to keep it that way0
614143424Wilmot Provisobanned slavery in the territory aquired in the Mexican War, supported by Northern antislaverists1
614143425Lewis Cassman who was the reputed father of popular sovereignty2
614143426John Calhounman who disagreed with Wilmot Proviso and said unconstitutional because no citizen can be told not to bring their property (slave property) into the territories3
614143427Thomas Hart Bentonman who said that seperately Wilmot and Calhoun were dull, but put together they became a pair of scissors and could cut the Union in half4
614143428popular sovereigntythe doctrine that stated that the people who lived on the territory should determine the status of slavery on their land5
614143429Free Soilparty that felt slavery was a threat to the American Dream ideal; run Van Buren in 18486
614143430Zachary Taylorrun by the Whigs in 1848, and wins because everyone loves a hero7
614143431Californiastate that explodes with people overnight because of gold rush8
614143432free stateCalifornia applied right away to become a __________9
614143433Free Soil State ConstitutionCongress must approve before a state can be declared free of slavery10
614143434Underground Railroadslaves' road to freedom11
614143435Harriet Tubman"Moses", helps lead slaves through the Underground Railroad12
614143436Fugitive Slave Lawslaws demanded by southerners to cope with runaway slaves13
614143437Compromise of 1850last hurrah for Henry Clay, John Calhoun, and Daniel Webster; huge attempt to make peace, try to please both North and South14
614143438Clay's Compromisecompromise that lets CA join as free state, NM and UT use popular sovereignty, TX borders settled and debts paid, ends slave trade in DC, and enacts new fugitive-slave laws15
614143439Californiain Clay's Compromise, _______ is admitted as a free state16
614143440New Mexico, Utahin Clay's Compromise, _______ and _____ begin using popular sovereignty17
614143441Texasin Clay's Compromise, _____'s borders are settled and debts are paid18
614143442DCin Clay's Compromise, slave trade (auction) was ended in ________19
614143443fugitive slave lawsin Clay's Compromise, new _______ came into affect and bounty hunters could bring slaves home for cash rewards20
614143444Omnibus Billthis comes out of the Webster-Calhoun Debates, different writers write parts of it, it fails21
614143445Stephen Douglasthe "Little Giant", man with a salesman-like mannerism; breaks Clay's bill into 5 different bills and makes sure they all get passed22
614143446Whigs vs. Democratsparties in the Election of 185223
614143447Franklin PierceDemocrats run this man in the Election of 1852; weak candidate, a nobody24
614143448Winfield ScottWhigs run this man in the Election of 1852, military hero25
614143449Piercewinner of Election of 185226
614143450Free Soil Partyconsists of Northern Whigs and Democrats27
614143451filibusteringprivate armies invading countries28
614143452William Walkerinvaded Nicaragua with his small army, conquered it, and became leader of Nicaragua29
614143453CubaAmerica wanted to buy this island, but Spain would not sell it to them30
614143454Ostend Manifestosecret Franklin Pierce administration proposal to purchase or to wrest militarily Cuba from Spain, opposed greatly by the North, so it was quickly abandoned31
614143455Chinathis Asian country gives America the most-favored-nation status because America wants to do business with the them, not sell them drugs (like the British); Americans flood into their country and they flood into America32
614143456Matthew Perrygoes to Japan and shows them the cannon, forces American ways in Japan33
614143457RailroadAmerica needs a new _____, but they can't decide where to put it to connect to California34
614143458Jefferson Davisproposes a railroad route from New Orleans to Los Angeles, purchases all land south of the Gila River and enables the railroad plan to go, easiest route35
614143459Gadsden Purchaseland purchased to help Jefferson Davis's railroad route36
614143460Stephen Douglaswants to run railroad route from Chicago across Mississippi to Wyoming, but very unorganized37
614143461Kansas-Nebraska ActDouglas puts this Act through Congress, divide the territory in half, call top Nebraska and bottom Kansas; use popular sovereignty, but that violates Missouri Compromise, but passes anyway38
614143462Uncle Tom's Cabinbook written by Harriet Beecher Stowe, wanted to show the North the wickedness of slavery, creates tension39
614143463Missouri Border Ruffians vs. Free State Militiaboth arm themselves and establish state capitols and declare they have won Kansas; Kansas thrown into Civil War40
614143464Missouri Border Ruffiansfor slavery in Bleeding Kansas41
614143465Free State militiaagainst slavery in Bleeding Kansas42
614143466LawrenceRuffians sack _______ (free state capitol) during Bleeding Kansas, Civil War begins in Kansas43
614143467John Brownantislavery man during Bleeding Kansas, lead his followers to Pottawatomie Creek to attack Lawrence44
614143468Pottawatomie Creekplace where John Brown leads his men to begin Kansas's Civil War45
614143469Republicannew political party, consists of angry Whigs, Free-Soilers, and Know-Nothings, party of upper-mid-west white American born; want internal improvements, free education, land in west to be free; party rises rapidly46
614143470Charles SumnerRepublican Massachusetts Senator, made comments about slavery, says he understands why the south likes to have slaves, because they like to sleep with them; beaten by Preston Brooks in front of all the Senate47
614143471Preston BrooksSouth Carolina Senator; nephew of the man Sumner accuses of sleeping with his slaves; beats Sumner in front of the whole Senate48
614143472Election of 1856Buchanan wins; Democrats vs. Republican vs. Know Nothing49
614143473James BuchananDemocratic Party runs in Election of 1856; bachelor, lawyer, out of country during Kansas-Nebrask Act50
614143474John C. FremontRepublican Party runs in Election of 1856; young, military guy involved in Mexican War, explorer51
614143475Millard FilmoreKnow-Nothing Party runs in Election of 1856; Zachary Taylor's VP, served as president when Taylor died52
614143476Dredd Scott CaseSupreme Court Case--slave sues for his freedom, brought to North by his owner and lived on free land but still held in bondage53
614143477Roger B. Tanneysays the Dredd Scott case is irrelevant because he can't sue for his freedom because proporty cannot sue their owner54
614143478Lincoln/Douglas Debatesrunning for Senate, first, Douglas wins, but then Lincoln starts to draw Douglas into talking about things that would get him into trouble and not into office--puts Douglas in a difficult position; Douglas wins but Lincoln has shown his power55
614143479Abraham Lincolnabnormally tall man, raw boned, grew up in rural Kentucky and then moved to Illinois, not much schooling but an avid reader; brilliant, worked in manual labor, read law, self-educated lawyer, circuit lawyer56
614143480Harper's FerryPotomac River, near VA, WV border; John Brown killed people to try to secure weapons, US army responded and hanged Brown (turns him into a hero and martyr)57
614143481Election of 1860whigs gone, Republicans strong, Democrats splitting58
614143482Douglas, Breckinridgein election of 1860, Democrats run ________ in the North and _______ in the South59
614143483Lincolnin election of 1860, Republicans run _______60
614143484John Bellin election of 1860, the Constitutional Party (Southern Whigs) run _________61
614143485South Carolinastate that begins all the secession in 186162
614143486Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Florida, Texasstates that follow South Carolina's secession; all cotton states63
614143487The Confederate States of AmericaMississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Florida, Texas and South Carolina all secede from the Union and become _________64
614143488Jefferson DavisThe Confederate States of America elected _______ to be their president in 186165

AP US History Vocabulary Chapters 16 & 17 Flashcards

Vocabulary for Chapters 16 & 17 of The American Pageant, 13th Edition.

Terms : Hide Images
119191576Harriet Beecher StoweA nineteenth-century American author best known for Uncle Tom's Cabin, a powerful novel that inflamed sentiment against slavery.0
119191577Nat TurnerA black slave of the early nineteenth century, who led the only effective and sustained slave revolt in American history. He and his supporters killed several dozen white people in Virginia before he was captured; he was hanged in 1831. Although Turner's rebellion led to a severe reaction among the slaveholders, it demonstrated that not all slaves were willing to accept their condition passively.1
119191578Sojourner TruthAn abolitionist and escaped slave of the nineteenth century. She was famous as a speaker against slavery.2
119191579Frederick DouglasUnited States abolitionist who escaped from slavery and became an influential writer and lecturer in the North (1817-1895)3
119191580abolitionismthe emancipation of the slaves, accomplished by the Emancipation Proclamation issued in 1863 and ratified in 18654
119191581The LiberatorAbolitionists newspaper founded by William Lloyd Garrison in Boston5
119305851Uncle Tom's CabinA novel, first published serially, by Harriet Beecher Stowe; it paints a grim picture of life under slavery. The title character is a pious, passive slave, who is eventually beaten to death by the overseer Simon Legree.6
119305852American Anti-Slavery Society(1833-1870) was an abolitionist society founded by William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan. Frederick Douglass was a key leader of the society and often spoke at its meetings. William Wells Brown was another freed slave who often spoke at meetings. Its headquarters was in New York City. From 1840 to 1870 it published a weekly newspaper, the National Anti-Slavery Standard.7
119305853William Lloyd GarrisonA prominent abolitionist of the nineteenth century. In his newspaper, The Liberator , he called for immediate freedom for the slaves and for the end of all political ties between the northern and southern states.8
119305854Denmark VeseyUnited States freed slave and insurrectionist in South Carolina who was involved in planning an uprising of slaves and was hanged (1767-1822)9
119305855David Walkerwas an outspoken African American activist who demanded the immediate end of slavery in the new nation. A leader within the Black enclave in Boston, Massachusetts, he published in 1829 his Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World: a call to "awaken my brethren" to the power within Black unity and struggle.10
119305856Theodore Dwight WeldAbolitionist who played a role as writer, editor, speaker, and organizer. He is best known for his co-authorship of the authoritative compendium, American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses, published in 1839. Harriet Beecher Stowe partly based Uncle Tom's Cabin on Weld's text and it is regarded as second only to that work in its influence on the antislavery movement.11
119305857Arthur and Lewis TappanNew York abolitionists who gained legal help and acquittal for the Africans and managed to increase public support and fund-raising for the organized return trip home to Africa for surviving members of the group.12
119305858John Tylerelected vice president and became the 10th President of the United States when Harrison died (1790-1862)13
119305859John Slidell(1793 - July 9, 1871) American politician, lawyer and businessman. Originally a native of New York, he moved to Louisiana as a young man and became a staunch defender of southern rights as a U.S. Representative and Senator.14
119305860Winfield Scott1795?-1858, a black slave whose suit for freedom (1857) was denied by the U.S. Supreme Court (Dred Scott Decision) on the grounds that a slave was not a citizen and therefore could not sue in a federal court.15
119305861Zachary Taylor1784-1850, 12th president of the U.S. 1849-50: major general during the Mexican War and commander of the army of the Rio Grande 1846.16
119305862Nicholas P. TristPrivate secretary to Andrew Jackson who was appointed U.S. consul in Havana, Cuba, but who was later removed from his post after the Amistad affair.17
119305863James K. Polk1795-1849, the 11th president of the U.S. president during the Mexican- American war. 1845-4918
119305864David Wilmot(January 20, 1814 - March 16, 1868) was a U.S. political figure. He was a sponsor and eponym of the Wilmot Proviso which aimed to ban slavery in land gained from Mexico in the Mexican-American War of 1846-1848. A Democrat, a Free Soiler, and a Republican during his political career, his opposition to slavery did not include the abolitionist position of ending slavery in the entire country, and his views on race, by today's standards, could be classified as racist.19
119305865John C. FremontUnited States explorer who mapped much of the American west and Northwest (1813-1890)20
119305866Santa AnnaMexican general who tried to crush the Texas revolt and who lost battles to Winfield Scott and Zachary Taylor in the Mexican War (1795-1876)21
119305867Webster-Ashburton TreatyAn agreement between the U.S. and England (1842) defining the boundary between British and American territory from Maine to present-day Minnesota.22
119305868Bear Flag Revolta revolt against Mexico proclaimed by California settlers on June 14, 1846, in Sonoma in the then-Mexican province of California. Declared during the Mexican-American War, the "republic" was a popular revolt; the participants never formed a government, and the republic was never recognized by any nation. The revolt lasted 26 days, at the end of which the U.S. Army took control of the area. It is most notable for creating the "Bear Flag", with insignia that appear on the modern state flag.23
119305869Treaty of Guadalupe-HidalgoThe peace treaty, largely dictated by the United States to the interim government of a militarily occupied Mexico City, that ended the Mexican-American War.24
119305870WhigsAmerican political party that grew out of opposition for the Jackson administration and the Democratic party. It supported a high tariff, economic expansion, and opposing the strength of the presidency when compared to the legislative branch.25
119305871Cotton KingdomAreas dominated both economically and socially by the cotton industry.26
119305872Liberty Partya former political party in the United States; formed in 1839 to oppose the practice of slavery; merged with the Free Soil Party in 184827
119305873American Colonization SocietyFounded in 1816, it was the primary vehicle to support the "return" of free African Americans to what was considered greater freedom in Africa. It helped to found the colony of Liberia in 1821-22 as a place for freedmen. Its founders were Henry Clay, John Randolph, and Richard Bland Lee.[1][2]28
119305874Elijah P. LovejoyAn American Presbyterian minister, journalist, and newspaper editor who was murdered by a mob in Alton, Illinois for his abolitionist views.29

AP US History Vocabulary Chapters 16 & 17 Flashcards

Vocabulary for Chapters 16 & 17 of The American Pageant, 13th Edition.

Terms : Hide Images
119191576Harriet Beecher StoweA nineteenth-century American author best known for Uncle Tom's Cabin, a powerful novel that inflamed sentiment against slavery.0
119191577Nat TurnerA black slave of the early nineteenth century, who led the only effective and sustained slave revolt in American history. He and his supporters killed several dozen white people in Virginia before he was captured; he was hanged in 1831. Although Turner's rebellion led to a severe reaction among the slaveholders, it demonstrated that not all slaves were willing to accept their condition passively.1
119191578Sojourner TruthAn abolitionist and escaped slave of the nineteenth century. She was famous as a speaker against slavery.2
119191579Frederick DouglasUnited States abolitionist who escaped from slavery and became an influential writer and lecturer in the North (1817-1895)3
119191580abolitionismthe emancipation of the slaves, accomplished by the Emancipation Proclamation issued in 1863 and ratified in 18654
119191581The LiberatorAbolitionists newspaper founded by William Lloyd Garrison in Boston5
119305851Uncle Tom's CabinA novel, first published serially, by Harriet Beecher Stowe; it paints a grim picture of life under slavery. The title character is a pious, passive slave, who is eventually beaten to death by the overseer Simon Legree.6
119305852American Anti-Slavery Society(1833-1870) was an abolitionist society founded by William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan. Frederick Douglass was a key leader of the society and often spoke at its meetings. William Wells Brown was another freed slave who often spoke at meetings. Its headquarters was in New York City. From 1840 to 1870 it published a weekly newspaper, the National Anti-Slavery Standard.7
119305853William Lloyd GarrisonA prominent abolitionist of the nineteenth century. In his newspaper, The Liberator , he called for immediate freedom for the slaves and for the end of all political ties between the northern and southern states.8
119305854Denmark VeseyUnited States freed slave and insurrectionist in South Carolina who was involved in planning an uprising of slaves and was hanged (1767-1822)9
119305855David Walkerwas an outspoken African American activist who demanded the immediate end of slavery in the new nation. A leader within the Black enclave in Boston, Massachusetts, he published in 1829 his Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World: a call to "awaken my brethren" to the power within Black unity and struggle.10
119305856Theodore Dwight WeldAbolitionist who played a role as writer, editor, speaker, and organizer. He is best known for his co-authorship of the authoritative compendium, American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses, published in 1839. Harriet Beecher Stowe partly based Uncle Tom's Cabin on Weld's text and it is regarded as second only to that work in its influence on the antislavery movement.11
119305857Arthur and Lewis TappanNew York abolitionists who gained legal help and acquittal for the Africans and managed to increase public support and fund-raising for the organized return trip home to Africa for surviving members of the group.12
119305858John Tylerelected vice president and became the 10th President of the United States when Harrison died (1790-1862)13
119305859John Slidell(1793 - July 9, 1871) American politician, lawyer and businessman. Originally a native of New York, he moved to Louisiana as a young man and became a staunch defender of southern rights as a U.S. Representative and Senator.14
119305860Winfield Scott1795?-1858, a black slave whose suit for freedom (1857) was denied by the U.S. Supreme Court (Dred Scott Decision) on the grounds that a slave was not a citizen and therefore could not sue in a federal court.15
119305861Zachary Taylor1784-1850, 12th president of the U.S. 1849-50: major general during the Mexican War and commander of the army of the Rio Grande 1846.16
119305862Nicholas P. TristPrivate secretary to Andrew Jackson who was appointed U.S. consul in Havana, Cuba, but who was later removed from his post after the Amistad affair.17
119305863James K. Polk1795-1849, the 11th president of the U.S. president during the Mexican- American war. 1845-4918
119305864David Wilmot(January 20, 1814 - March 16, 1868) was a U.S. political figure. He was a sponsor and eponym of the Wilmot Proviso which aimed to ban slavery in land gained from Mexico in the Mexican-American War of 1846-1848. A Democrat, a Free Soiler, and a Republican during his political career, his opposition to slavery did not include the abolitionist position of ending slavery in the entire country, and his views on race, by today's standards, could be classified as racist.19
119305865John C. FremontUnited States explorer who mapped much of the American west and Northwest (1813-1890)20
119305866Santa AnnaMexican general who tried to crush the Texas revolt and who lost battles to Winfield Scott and Zachary Taylor in the Mexican War (1795-1876)21
119305867Webster-Ashburton TreatyAn agreement between the U.S. and England (1842) defining the boundary between British and American territory from Maine to present-day Minnesota.22
119305868Bear Flag Revolta revolt against Mexico proclaimed by California settlers on June 14, 1846, in Sonoma in the then-Mexican province of California. Declared during the Mexican-American War, the "republic" was a popular revolt; the participants never formed a government, and the republic was never recognized by any nation. The revolt lasted 26 days, at the end of which the U.S. Army took control of the area. It is most notable for creating the "Bear Flag", with insignia that appear on the modern state flag.23
119305869Treaty of Guadalupe-HidalgoThe peace treaty, largely dictated by the United States to the interim government of a militarily occupied Mexico City, that ended the Mexican-American War.24
119305870WhigsAmerican political party that grew out of opposition for the Jackson administration and the Democratic party. It supported a high tariff, economic expansion, and opposing the strength of the presidency when compared to the legislative branch.25
119305871Cotton KingdomAreas dominated both economically and socially by the cotton industry.26
119305872Liberty Partya former political party in the United States; formed in 1839 to oppose the practice of slavery; merged with the Free Soil Party in 184827
119305873American Colonization SocietyFounded in 1816, it was the primary vehicle to support the "return" of free African Americans to what was considered greater freedom in Africa. It helped to found the colony of Liberia in 1821-22 as a place for freedmen. Its founders were Henry Clay, John Randolph, and Richard Bland Lee.[1][2]28
119305874Elijah P. LovejoyAn American Presbyterian minister, journalist, and newspaper editor who was murdered by a mob in Alton, Illinois for his abolitionist views.29

APWH U3: Chapter 13: The Spread of Chinese Civilization: Japan, Korea, and Vietnam Flashcards

These cards are a compilation of various chapters from Unit Three of the AP World History curriculum. The time range of the entire collection of cards range from 600 c. CE - 1450 CE. This set specifically follows the Spread of Chinese Civilization in Japan, Korea, and Vietnam. Concepts covered include:
-Influence of China on early Japan, including the Taika Reforms
-Japanese feudalism, including the differences between bushi and daimyo, the role of the emperor, and the founding efforts of the Minamoto
-Status of the economy and women during the era of daimyo (Sengoku Period)
-Sinification of Korea; focusing specifically on socio-political characteristics borrowed, shared, forced, independent
-Sinification and independence in Vietnam

Terms : Hide Images
1923749391What best spread culture throughout Japan, Korea, and Vietnam?Buddhism.0
1923749392What were the three cities of the Imperial Age?Taika, Nara, and Heian.1
1923749393What did the three cities of the Imperial Age do?They attempted to borrow from China at its height.2
1923749394What aspects did Taika, Nara, and Heian attempt to borrow from China?The idea of a sheltered emperor, army tactics, and art and literature.3
1923749395Taika and Nara both what?Have their governments try to copy the government system of the Tang. They also adopt Chinese characters with the use of a spoken Japanese language.4
1923749396What was the court life at Heian like?It was luxurious, and strictly based on social appearance and court etiquette. Women were dressed in such ways that they looked almost artificial, and were "used" merely for decoration in the courts.5
1923749397What government did the Taika reforms implant?A centralized bureaucracy.6
1923749398What began the Heian court period?An attempt to get away from the Buddhist monks.7
1923749399What was the impact of the Heian period?The power was turned over to aristocratic families, and small armies eventually lead to feudalism.8
1923749400Who were the Fujiwara?An aristocratic clan that used intermarriages to reaffirm its power and keep family members in high governmental positions.9
1923749401What was the role of women like in the court life at Heian?The status of women rose as they were responsible for not only housework and child-bearing, but also for creative use; in paintings, poetry, and other literature.10
1923749402The Decline in Imperial Power is caused by what?The Fujiwara rise in power, the regional lords (bushi) and the samurai they control, and the warrior class begins to emerge.11
1923749403What happened to the status of peasants at the end of the Imperial Age in Japan?Their status was reduced to that of a serf in Europe.12
1923749404During the Era of Warrior Dominance, what is unique?Chinese influence starts to decline. Ceramics, Landscape, and Poetry. The Emperor's position becomes nominal while the feudal, aristocratic families have the real power.13
1923749405What do the administrators of the Warrior Period do?They refuse to send embassies to China, and refuse to pay tribute.14
1923749406What were the Gempei Wars?Wars between the peasants and the samurai.15
1923749407In the Taira vs. Minamoto battle, who wins, and what do they establish?The Minamoto win and establish the bakufu as their first action.16
1923749408Who were the warlords?Also called shoguns, these were the military leaders.17
1923749409What does the Minamoto family do in order to get to the emperor?They start to manipulate the shoguns.18
1923749410What happens to the samurai when the Ashikaga arise?They become landowners and leaders, rather than members of the bureaucracy.19
1923749411How many mini-kingdoms did the differend daimyo rulers rule?Over three hundred mini-kingdoms.20
1923749412The Age of the Warlords divided Japan into three-hundred separate states; who were these ruled by?Each was ruled by a different warlord. This caused the emperor to lose control to the shoguns, or military leaders.21
1923749413As time went on, the era of the warlords began to take a turn towards what?Barbarism.22
1923749414Although Korea was separate from China and Japan, it was greatly influenced; True or False.True.23
1923749415Although many Koreans resist the reforms, what happens to them in their society between the two world powers?They are unsuccessful and are sinified.24
1923749416What were the two main Korean kingdoms that acted as the basis for Korean culture?Silla and Paekche.25
1923749417What happens during the Silla and Paekche dynasties?The peak of Chinese influence; along with the kingdom of silla becoming politically independent.26
1923749418What was the Koryo collapse caused by?Peasant revolts, labor and tax burdens, weakening of the government, Mongol invasions, and failure to take over the Yi dynasty, the succeeding dynasty in line for China.27
1923749419What did the Yi dynasty do that was significant and how long did they rule?They restored the aristocratic dominance over the people, and ruled for almost 600 years.28
1923749420In Vietnam, what was the role of women like?They had much greater freedom and differed from Chinese women in fashion, attitude, and personality.29
1923749421Although some Chinese aspects of society were accepted, the Vietnamese were resistant to sinification; True or False.True.30
1923749422What was the major crop of Vietnam that was traded with China and the rest of Asia that cut down on poverty?Champa rice.31
1923749423Where were the Vietnamese pushed by the Chinese, where they prospered?The Red River Valley.32
1923749424Who were the roots of resistance in Vietnamese society, and what did they cause?The roots of resistance in Vietnamese society were the peasants, and caused the Trung Sisters to revolt in order to maintain social status and push the Chinese out to prevent Confucian ideas coming in as influences from China.33
1923749425What do the Vietnamese do in order to gain their independence from China?They wait until China had reached a period of political turmoil, of which they took great advantage of and gained their independence from the great world power.34

APWH U3: Chapter 12: The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties in Chinese Civilization Flashcards

These cards are a compilation of various chapters from Unit Three of the AP World History curriculum. The time range of the entire collection of cards range from 600 c. CE - 1450 CE. This set specifically follows The Era of the Tang and Song Dynasties in Chinese Civilization. Concepts covered include:
-The geographic size and socio-political structures and elements of the Sui, Tang, & Song Dynasties
-Buddhism, the Neo-Confucian scholar-gentry, and the antagonistic relationship between the two
-Technological developments and massive public works of the Tang-Song Era, including the Grand Canal, the compass, the abacus, and movable type printing
-The role of women during the Tang-Song Era, including the practice of foot binding
-Tang-Song artistic efforts, including poetry and landscape paintings

Terms : Hide Images
1917663558What was the capital of the Xong rulers and what was it known for?Hangzhou; was renowned for its beauty and sophistication.0
1917663559How were traders and artisans able to prosper through the sale of goods and the manufacturing of products?Being located near the Yangtze River helped this a lot; as did overseas as well as trans-continental trade.1
1917663560What did the emergence of the Sui dynasty in China signal?A return to strong dynastic control in China.2
1917663561Who was Yiang Jian?The "Literary Emperor" later called Wendi, extended his rule across north China.3
1917663562What impact did Emperor Wendi have on China?He reunited the traditional core areas of Chinese civilization for the first time in over three hundred and a half centuries.4
1917663563Large landholders and peasants were taxed. Why?In order to keep the granaries filled in case of crisis.5
1917663564What impact did Yangdi have on China?He restored the Confucian examination system; was responsible for the construction of a Chinese canal system, assassinated in 618.6
1917663565Who was Li Yuan?The Duke of Tang after the assassination of Yangdi in 618. He is considered the founder of the Tang dynasty.7
1917663566What did the Tang victories in central Asia and Afghanistan mean for nomadic peoples?This meant that the nomadic people had to submit to Tang rule.8
1917663567Efforts were made to recreate what kind of governmental system?An imperial bureaucracy.9
1917663568The capital was moved to what great learning center later on?Chang'an.10
1917663569Who was the central administration dominated by?A small number of established families.11
1917663570Which was more popular, Confucianism or Buddhism; and why?Buddhism, because Confucianism acted as a threat to aristocratic families and Buddhist monastic orders.12
1917663571The Anti-Buddhist Backlash was brought by what other two religions?Confucianism and Daoism.13
1917663572What was the most damaging factor to Buddhism?The growing campaign of Confucian scholar-gentry administrators to convince the Tang rulers that the large Buddhist monastic establishments acted as an economic threat to the imperial order.14
1917663573Why did the Tang regime lose huge amounts of revenue as a result of imperial grants?This happened as a result of monastic lands and resources were not taxed.15
1917663574Beset by internal rebellions and nomadic incursions, the Tang gave way to the Song. What was unique about this dynasty?Although smaller than the Tang, the Song Confucian revival flourished.16
1917663575The sinified khitans saw the Song empire as what?Culturally superior- an area from which they could learn much from in statecraft, the arts, and economic organization.17
1917663576Who was higher in the social hierarchy, the military or the scholar-gentry?The scholar-gentry.18
1917663577Who was allowed to become governor in Song society?Only civil officials.19
1917663578The great influence of the scholar-gentry in the Song era was mirrored in what?The revival of Confucian ideas and values that dominated intellectual life.20
1917663579What was a large factor in the slowing of intellectual activity in China during this time?The Neo-Confucian emphasis on tradition and hostility to foreign influences.21
1917663580What was the significance of Xi Xia?It was a kingdom of Tangut people north of the Song. In the 11th century, it collected tribute that drained Song resources and burdened the Chinese peasantry.22
1917663581Define the Golden Age of the Tang and Song.A period of major shifts in the population balance, trade, commerce, expansion, art, and technology. i.e., the Grand Canal, crop and population increase, Silk Routes reopening, etc.23
1917663582What was the ship that dominated the seas of Asia made distinctly by the Chinese?Chinese junks.24
1917663583BOTH the Tang and the Song promoted what?The expansion of Chinese settlement and agricultural production.25
1917663584While the Tang had beautiful poetry and short stories, the Song had what?Landscape paintings.26
1917663585What were the most effective weapons against nomadic invaders?Napatha flamethrowers, poisonous gases, and rocket launchers.27
1917663586What were some technological innovations of the Tang and Song?The compass, movable type, and paper.28
1917663587What social class was responsible for much of the artistic and creative aspects of the Tang and Song eras?The scholar-gentry class.29
1917663588What kind of art became heavily patronized by the court, prosperous merchants, and wealthy monasteries?Buddhist art.30

American Government- Congress Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
17887556581) Which of the following did the framers of the Constitution conceive of as the center of policymaking in America? A) the president B) the people C) Congress D) the courts E) the Supreme CourtC) Congress0
17887556592) The foremost attraction for the job of serving in Congress is A) a salary four times the income of the typical American family. B) generous retirement benefits. C) the power to make key public policy decisions. D) travel benefits. E) employment opportunities after leaving office.C) the power to make key public policy decisions1
17887556603) Which of the following is NOT one of the perquisites which go with the job of being a member of Congress? A) a salary of over $150,000 B) subsidized housing in the Virginia or Maryland suburbs of D.C. C) free use of the mails to communicate with constituents D) free office space in Washington, D.C., and in the constituency from which elected E) a budget to support office staffB) subsidized housing in the Virginia or Maryland suburbs of D.C2
17887556624) ________ privileges refer to the free use of the mails enjoyed by Congress. A) Franking B) Conmail C) Junket D) Procurement E) E-mailA) Franking3
17887556635) The most prominent characteristic of a Congresspersonʹs job is A) prestige. B) hard work. C) high pay. D) travel. E) the 30-hour work week.B) hard work4
17887556646) A myth about members of Congress is that they A) generally are educated and come from high-status occupations. B) tend to develop policy specialties. C) are especially effective in carrying out their constituent service. D) are overpaid, underworked, corrupt, and ineffective. E) are overwhelmingly male.D) are overpaid, underworked, corrupt, and ineffective5
17887556657) The United States House of Representatives has ________ members. A) 638 B) 100 C) 435 D) 80 E) 535C) 4356
17887556678) The United States Senate has ________ members. A) 50 B) 100 C) 435 D) 438 E) 535B) 1007
17887556689) How many senators are elected from each state? A) one B) two C) four D) it depends on a stateʹs population E) the same number as it has electors in the electoral collegeB) two8
178875566910) Which of the following is TRUE about the minimum age requirements for members of Congress set forth in the Constitution? A) One must be at least 21 years of age to serve in the House of Representatives. B) One must be at least 30 years of age to serve in the Senate. C) One must be at least 35 years of age to serve in either the House or the Senate. D) There are no age requirements for members of Congress. E) The age requirements are the same for the House and the Senate.B) One must be at least 30 years of age to serve in the Senate.9
178875567011) The members of the Senate closely reflect the nation in terms of A) race. B) gender. C) economic status. D) prior occupation. E) none of the aboveE) none of the above10
178875567212) The income and occupations of members of Congress A) typically reflect the pluralistic nature of American society. B) are very close to the average found among their constituency. C) would, for the most part, make them members of the elite in American society. D) have no real impact on public policymaking. E) places over 90 percent of them in the millionaire businessperson class.C Page Ref: 355-356 Edition: National11
178875567313) African Americans constitute ________ of the United States Senate. A) less than 10 percent B) approximately 35 percent C) roughly half D) well over half E) about 20 percentA) less than 10 percent12
178875567414) In terms of religion, most members of Congress are A) Catholic. B) Jewish. C) Protestant. D) born-again Christians. E) atheists.C) Protestant13
178875567515) The most common prior occupation for members of Congress is A) business. B) law. C) education. D) public service. E) state legislator.B) law14
178875567716) Relative to the total population, the most underrepresented group in Congress is A) African Americans. B) Hispanics. C) women. D) Jews. E) homosexuals.C Page Ref: 356 Edition: National15
178875567817) Overall, members of Congress can ________ of the American people. A) possibly claim substantive representation, but not descriptive representation B) possibly claim descriptive representation, but not substantive representation C) claim both substantive and descriptive representation D) claim neither substantive nor descriptive representation E) possibly claim both substantive and descriptive representationA Page Ref: 357 Edition: National16
178875567918) Millionaire Senator Edward Kennedy sponsoring a bill to help the poor and disadvantaged would be an example of A) descriptive representation. B) substantive representation. C) elite representation. D) constituent representation. E) franking privileges.B Page Ref: 357 Edition: National17
178875568019) Incumbents are those A) already holding office. B) running for office for the first time. C) who have been defeated in an election. D) retired members of Congress. E) running for an office.A Page Ref: 358 Edition: National18
178875568220) In most congressional elections, challengers A) outspend an incumbent. B) win. C) are better known than incumbents. D) lose. E) spend roughly as much money as incumbents.D Page Ref: 358 Edition: National19
178875568321) The single most important advantage to someone trying to get elected to Congress is A) being an incumbent. B) having more money to spend on campaigning. C) being charismatic and photogenic. D) having a clean record. E) winning the endorsement of the top leaders of their party.A Page Ref: 358 Edition: National20
178875568422) Comparison between members of the House and Senate concerning the impact of incumbency on their reelection chances shows that one of the reasons that senators have a smaller advantage is because they A) have become over-specialized as policymakers. B) are more likely to be held accountable on controversial issues. C) are less visible. D) have longer terms that increase the chance of scandal. E) represent more homogenous constituencies.B Page Ref: 358-359 Edition: National21
178875568623) Reasons that incumbent senators have greater competition than incumbent members of the House include all of the following EXCEPT A) an entire state is more diverse than a congressional district, providing more of a base for opposition. B) senators have less personal contact with their constituencies. C) voters are less likely to know the issue positions of their senators than their representatives. D) senators tend to draw more visible challengers. E) senate challengers are better funded than House challengers.C Page Ref: 358-359 Edition: National22
178875568724) Which of these candidates would most likely get elected? A) a representative running for reelection B) a senator running for reelection C) an incumbent representative challenging a senator D) a challenger E) an incumbentA Page Ref: 358-359 Edition: National23
178875568825) Compared to members of the House, senators are A) more likely to have personal contact with their constituents. B) more likely to face difficult reelection opponents. C) less likely to face difficult reelection opponents. D) less likely to use television in their reelection campaigns. E) none of the aboveB Page Ref: 358-359 Edition: National24
178875569026) Studies have shown that presidential ________ in an election have little effect on the success of the partyʹs candidates for the House and Senate. A) coattails B) junkets C) vetoes D) headwinds E) scandalsA Page Ref: 359 Edition: National25
178875569127) Which of the following is NOT one of the three primary activities that members of Congress engage in to increase the probability of their reelection? A) advertising B) credit-claiming C) position-taking D) oversight E) None of the above; oversight is a form of position-taking.D Page Ref: 360-362 Edition: National26
178875569228) An example of casework by a member of Congress is A) writing a newsletter to send out to constituents. B) helping a constituent gain citizenship. C) voting for a bill desired by constituents. D) working with a caucus on a public policy that affects his or her constituents. E) all of the aboveB Page Ref: 361 Edition: National27
178875569429) The pork barrel and casework are examples of A) opportunities for credit-claiming by members of Congress. B) advertising techniques. C) descriptive representation. D) position-taking. E) congressional continuity.A Page Ref: 361 Edition: National28
178875569530) An especially important asset for incumbents running for reelection is their A) service to constituents. B) voting records. C) support by party leaders in Congress. D) presidential support. E) invisibility.A Page Ref: 360 Edition: National29
178875569631) The ________ is the list of federal projects, grants, and contracts available to cities, businesses, colleges, and institutions which members of Congress seek to locate in their district to promote the interests of their constituency. A) casework B) pork barrel C) frank D) junket E) Treasurerʹs registerB Page Ref: 361 Edition: National30
178875569832) Federal grants and contracts that members of Congress try to obtain for their constituents are collectively referred to as A) the pork barrel. B) casework. C) public service. D) perquisites. E) affirmative action.A Page Ref: 361 Edition: National31
178875569933) Members of Congress engage in each of the following activities that increase the probability of their reelections EXCEPT A) advertising. B) party voting. C) credit-claiming. D) position taking. E) spend much of their time away from Congress and in their home districts.B Page Ref: 360-362 Edition: National32
178875570034) What accounts for the success of congressional candidates? A) their highly representative policy positions B) presidential coattails C) economic forces D) advertising, credit-claiming, and position-taking. E) good looksD Page Ref: 360-361 Edition: National33
178875570235) Which of the following is NOT true about incumbents? A) They usually win elections. B) They usually have more money than their challengers. C) They usually have higher name recognition and visibility than their opponents. D) They usually face very tough challengers, especially in races for the House. E) They usually have their partyʹs endorsement.D Page Ref: 358-359 Edition: National34
178875570336) Which of the following statements about those who challenge incumbent members of the House is TRUE? A) They are usually not well-known. B) They are usually experienced legislators. C) They usually have a well-established organizational backing. D) They tend to be well-financed. E) They usually conduct public opinion polls and only run if they have a good chance of winning.A Page Ref: 358-359 Edition: National35
178875570437) In the House races of 2004, the typical incumbent outspent the typical challenger by A) 2 to 1. B) 4 to 1. C) 6 to 1. D) 15 to 1. E) 20 to 1.D Page Ref: 362 Edition: National36
178875570638) Which of the following statements about money in Congressional elections is FALSE? A) It costs more money to elect a president than to elect a member of Congress. B) Most of the money spent in congressional elections comes from individuals. C) About a quarter of the funds raised in general election contests come from PACs. D) Political Action Committees often make contributions after the election. E) PACs often switch sides and give money to the candidate they originally opposed.A Page Ref: 362 Edition: National37
178875570739) The role of party identification in votersʹ choices in congressional campaigns is A) extremely important, and increasingly so. B) moderately important, even though party identification is not as strong as it used to be. C) slightly important in a few districts, not important in most others. D) not important at all, and never really has been. E) much less significant than in presidential campaigns.B Page Ref: 363 Edition: National38
178875570840) Party loyalty at the voting booth is A) stronger than it was a generation ago. B) no longer a good indication of voting behavior. C) still a good predictor of voting behavior. D) almost nonexistent today. E) greater among Democrats than among Republicans.C Page Ref: 363 Edition: National39
178875570941) House incumbents typically receive A) about the same amount of contributions from PACs as challengers. B) less from PACs than challengers. C) much more from PACs as challengers. D) generous support from their party campaign committees. E) none of the above.D Page Ref: 362 Edition: National40
178875571142) On average, most of the money raised by a candidate for Congress comes from A) political parties. B) individual contributions. C) the candidateʹs own savings. D) Political Action Committees. E) loans.B Page Ref: 362 Edition: National41
178875571243) A single Political Action Committee A) has no limit on the amount of money it can spend on a candidate. B) can at most account for only a small percentage of a winnerʹs total spending. C) usually puts all its efforts into one candidate. D) can gain the most influence by giving money to candidates who disagree with them. E) can make or break a candidate in a particularly close congressional election.B Page Ref: 362 Edition: National42
178875571344) When Political Action Committees contribute money to members of Congress they are usually seeking A) access to policymakers. B) votes on specific legislation. C) to install a preferred challenger in office. D) to create a more pluralistic Congress. E) to literally buy opposing legislatorsʹ votes.A Page Ref: 362 Edition: National43
178875571545) Which of the following statements about the role of money in congressional elections is FALSE? A) Outspending your opponent by a large margin is no guarantee of success. B) The more challengers spend, the more votes they receive. C) Challengers usually outspend incumbents. D) In open seats, the candidate who spends the most usually wins. E) Incumbents benefit less from campaign spending than challengers.C Page Ref: 362 Edition: National44
178875571646) All of the following may increase the likelihood that an incumbent is defeated EXCEPT A) national political ʺtidal waves.ʺ B) redistricting. C) campaign funding. D) scandals. E) a strong challenger.C Page Ref: 363-364 Edition: National45
178875571747) After each federal census, A) the office of the Speaker of the House changes hands. B) the size of Congress increases. C) the membership of the House is reapportioned D) the Senate reapportions its membership. E) all of the aboveC Page Ref: 363 Edition: National46
178875571948) Occasionally, a major political tidal wave rolls across the country and throws large numbers of incumbents of a given party out of office. When did this last occur? A) 1994 B) 1980 C) 1974 D) 1964 E) 1954A Page Ref: 364 Edition: National47
178875572049) Which of the following statements about Congress is FALSE? A) Congress is a collection of generalists trying to make policy on specialized topics. B) Members of Congress are surrounded by people who know (or claim to know) more than they do. C) Members of Congress are often unsure of what is being voted on when a roll-call vote is called. D) Members frequently ask their colleagues how to vote. E) none of the aboveE Page Ref: 363-364 Edition: National48
178875572150) Nebraskaʹs legislature is the only one in the United States that is NOT A) elected by the voters. B) unicameral. C) bicameral. D) tricameral. E) under term limits.C Page Ref: 364 Edition: National49
178875572351) Bicameralism means that a legislative body is one A) with two houses, providing checks and balances on policymaking. B) in which each state has two senators, providing equal representation of the states. C) in which incumbents have a better chance of being reelected, providing continuity in policymaking. D) that must share power with a president, providing more efficient policymaking. E) in which there are only two political parties.A Page Ref: 365 Edition: National50
178875572452) To be sent to the president, a bill must be passed by A) the House. B) the Senate. C) either the House or the Senate. D) both the House and the Senate. E) a majority vote of Congress, regardless of which house the votes come from.D Page Ref: 365 Edition: National51
178875572553) The House ________ Committee reviews most bills coming from other committees before they go on to the full House, thus performing a traffic cop function. A) Appropriations B) Ways and Means C) Rules D) Authorization E) ReviewC Page Ref: 365 Edition: National52
178875572754) Articles of impeachment must be passed by A) either the House or the Senate. B) both the House and the Senate. C) the Senate. D) the House. E) the Supreme Court.D Page Ref: 366 Edition: National53
178875572855) House seats are up for election every A) two years. B) four years. C) six years. D) eight years. E) five years.A Page Ref: 366 Edition: National54
178875572956) A Senate seat is up for election every A) two years. B) four years. C) six years. D) eight years. E) five years.C Page Ref: 366 Edition: National55
178875573057) Which of the following is TRUE about the Senate as compared to the House? A) more centralized with stronger leadership B) seniority more important in determining power C) more influential on the budget D) more influential in foreign affairs E) smaller in number, less powerful and less prestigiousD Page Ref: 366 Edition: National56
178875573258) According to the Constitution, revenue bills must originate in the A) Internal Revenue Service. B) Federal Reserve System. C) House. D) Senate. E) Treasury Department.C Page Ref: 366 Edition: National57
178875573359) Nominees to the United States Supreme Court must be confirmed by A) the Senate. B) the House. C) either the House or the Senate. D) both the House and the Senate. E) the president.A Page Ref: 366 Edition: National58
178875573460) According to the Constitution, once impeached, federal officials are then tried in the A) Supreme Court. B) House. C) Senate. D) Department of Justice. E) United States District Court for the District of Columbia.C Page Ref: 366 Edition: National59
178875573561) The House Rules Committee A) has its members appointed by the House majority leader. B) is similar to the Senate Rules Committee. C) usually retains independence from the House leadership. D) reviews most bills coming from committee before they go to the full House. E) all of the aboveD Page Ref: 365 Edition: National60
178875573762) The Constitution gives the House of Representatives the power to A) initiate all revenue bills. B) ratify all treaties. C) confirm presidential nominations. D) try impeached officials. E) all of the aboveA Page Ref: 366 Edition: National61
178875573863) One of the key differences between the House and Senate is that the House A) has weaker leadership. B) is more influential on foreign affairs. C) has more policy specialization. D) is less centralized. E) is less institutionalized.C Page Ref: 366 Edition: National62
178875573964) One of the key differences between the House and Senate is that the Senate A) is more centralized. B) is less dependent on seniority for determining power. C) has a lower turnover rate. D) has stronger leadership. E) has more anarchy.B Page Ref: 366 Edition: National63
178875574065) The real differences between the House and the Senate lie in their A) ideology. B) membersʹ characteristics. C) organization and centralization of power. D) role in policy. E) power relative to each other.C Page Ref: 366 Edition: National64
178875574266) The filibuster A) is unique to the Senate. B) is unique to the House. C) is allowed in both the House and the Senate. D) has been ruled unconstitutional. E) has been prohibited in both the House and Senate.A Page Ref: 366 Edition: National65
178875574367) ________ members present and voting can halt a filibuster by voting for cloture. A) Sixty B) Seventy C) Eighty D) Fifty-one E) Seventy-fiveA Page Ref: 366-367 Edition: National66
178875574468) The filibuster is a technique used in the A) House to delay legislation until a full House can convene. B) Senate to prolong debate in order to kill a bill. C) Senate to bypass committees in voting on controversial issues. D) House to allow more time to debate controversial policies. E) House and Senate to prevent a vote on a bill.B Page Ref: 366 Edition: National67
178875574569) To cut off debate and end a filibuster is known as A) franking. B) coattails. C) cloture. D) overriding. E) hushing.C Page Ref: 366-367 Edition: National68
178875574770) To end a filibuster requires ________ members present and voting to cut off debate. A) 50 B) 60 C) 75 D) 99 E) 218B Page Ref: 366 Edition: National69
178875574871) Which of the following congressional offices is mandated by the Constitution? A) Speaker of the House B) House and Senate Majority Leader C) President of the House D) President of the United States E) all of the aboveA Page Ref: 367 Edition: National70
178875574972) Which of the following does the Speaker NOT play a role in? A) making committee assignments B) presiding over the House when it is in session C) recommending which members should be expelled from the House for failure to support the partyʹs positions on bills D) assigning most bills to committees E) appointing the partyʹs legislative leadersC Page Ref: 367 Edition: National71
178875575173) The ________ is next in line after the vice president to succeed a president who resigns, dies in office, or is impeached. A) Senate majority leader B) Senate minority leader C) House majority leader D) Speaker of the House E) Chair of the Joint Chiefs of StaffD Page Ref: 367 Edition: National72
178875575274) The minority whip A) assists the majority leader in party-line votes. B) becomes the Speaker automatically if the Speaker resigns. C) represents African Americans, Hispanic Americans, and Asian Americans in each chamber of Congress. D) keeps a close head count on key votes, and attempts to keep party members in line. E) is used to punish members who do not vote with the rest of their party.D Page Ref: 368 Edition: National73
178875575375) Which of the following statements about the majority leader of the House of Representatives is FALSE? A) The majority leader exercises substantial control over which bills get assigned to which committees. B) The majority leader is the main steppingstone to the job of Speaker of the House. C) The majority leader is responsible for scheduling bills in the House. D) The majority leader is responsible for rounding up votes on behalf of the partyʹs position on legislation. E) He or she is the principal ally of the Speaker.A Page Ref: 368 Edition: National74
178875575576) The ________ has the job of presiding over the Senate, breaking ties when necessary. A) majority leader B) majority whip C) minority leader D) vice president E) SpeakerD Page Ref: 368 Edition: National75
178875575677) The most powerful person in the Senate is the A) majority leader. B) vice president of the United States, who serves as president of the Senate. C) chair of the Rules Committee. D) Speaker. E) president of the United States.A Page Ref: 368 Edition: National76
178875575778) Most important congressional activity is done A) on legislatorsʹ visits to their home districts. B) in meetings of standing committees and their subcommittees. C) on the House floor. D) on the Senate floor. E) in the White House.B Page Ref: 369 Edition: National77
178875575879) Most of the business of Congress takes place A) in congressional districts. B) on the floor of the House and Senate. C) in committees and subcommittees. D) during evening social functions. E) in the Rules committees.C Page Ref: 369 Edition: National78
178875576080) A ________ committee is one appointed for a limited, specific purpose, such as that set up to investigate the Watergate scandal. A) standing B) select C) conference D) joint E) specialB Page Ref: 369 Edition: National79
178875576181) Appropriations, Judiciary, and Armed Forces are all examples of ________ committees. A) standing B) select C) conference D) joint E) ruleA Page Ref: 369 Edition: National80
178875576282) When the House and the Senate pass different versions of the same bill A) the House bill is changed to conform with the Senate bill. B) the Senate bill is changed to conform with the House bill. C) a conference committee is appointed to resolve differences. D) a joint committee is appointed to resolve differences. E) the president may select which bill to enact into law.C Page Ref: 369 Edition: National81
178875576483) Legislative ________ is the process of monitoring the bureaucracy and its administration of policy. A) franking B) stonewalling C) overview D) oversight E) supremacyD Page Ref: 371 Edition: National82
178875576584) When members of Congress hold a hearing to question a cabinet member on how a law is being carried out, they are engaging in A) agenda-setting. B) filibustering. C) legislative oversight. D) casework. E) congressional administration.C Page Ref: 371 Edition: National83
178875576685) Which of the following statements about congressional committees is FALSE? A) Unless a committee gives a bill a favorable report it almost never can be considered by the full House or Senate. B) The most important output of the committee is the marked up bill. C) Members of the committee usually serve as floor managers of the bill. D) Members of the committee act as cue-givers to whom other members turn for advice. E) none of the aboveE Page Ref: 369-372 Edition: National84
178875576886) The seniority system gave a decisive edge to House members from ________ districts. A) Republican B) suburban C) older D) safe E) competitiveD Page Ref: 373 Edition: National85
178875576987) House and Senate committees A) all have an equal number of Republicans and Democrats. B) all have a majority of members from the majority party in that chamber. C) must have their membership approved by the president. D) are non-partisan, and thus some committees are nearly all Democrats and others nearly all Republicans. E) are populated by the hired staff members of Congress, freeing the elected members for more important work.B Page Ref: 373 Edition: National86
178875577088) Members of Congress seek committees that will help them achieve each of the following goals EXCEPT A) reelection. B) influence in Congress. C) a salary increase. D) opportunity to make policy in areas they think are important. E) opportunity to make policy in areas important to their constituents.C Page Ref: 373 Edition: National87
178875577289) Traditionally, Congressional committee chairpersons have been chosen through A) the seniority system. B) party rank. C) popularity with majority leaders. D) a majority vote by committee members. E) the merit system.A Page Ref: 373 Edition: National88
178875577390) Members of Congress who informally band together in groups to promote and protect mutual interests (e.g., mushroom growers) form what are called A) subcommittees. B) committees. C) caucuses. D) junkets. E) interest groups.C Page Ref: 374 Edition: National89
178875577491) Caucuses in Congress A) press committees to hold hearings. B) push their preferred legislation. C) mobilize votes for favored legislation. D) all of the above E) none of the aboveD Page Ref: 374 Edition: National90
178875577592) Congressional reforms of the 1970s A) professionalized the operation of Congress and made it much more efficient. B) decentralized power and democratized Congress. C) were aimed at rooting out scandal and corruption. D) ended the two-party monopoly of Congress and brought new parties into Congress. E) all of the aboveB Page Ref: 373 Edition: National91
178875577793) Republican congressional reforms in the 1990s included all of the following EXCEPT A) committee chairs were allowed to choose the chairs of subcommittees on their committees. B) both committee and subcommittee chairs were limited to three consecutive two-year terms as chair. C) some subcommittees were eliminated. D) committee chairs were given complete control over the timing of bills under consideration. E) none of the aboveD Page Ref: 373-374 Edition: National92
178875577894) Which of the following is responsible for responding to congressional requests for information and providing non-partisan studies? A) Congressional Research Service B) Congressional Budget Office C) General Accounting Office D) Ways and Means Committee E) Office of the Majority LeaderA Page Ref: 376 Edition: National93
178875577995) Committee staff is responsible for all of the following EXCEPT A) providing services to constituents. B) organizing hearings. C) writing legislation. D) monitoring the executive branch. E) coordinating with congressional offices.A Page Ref: 376 Edition: National94
178875578196) Which of the following offices is responsible for making economic projections about the performance of the economy, the costs of proposed policies, and the economic effects of taxing and spending alternatives? A) Congressional Research Service B) Congressional Budget Office C) General Accounting Office D) Ways and Means Committee E) Federal ReserveB Page Ref: 378 Edition: National95
178875578297) Only ________ can formally submit a bill for congressional consideration. A) members of the House B) senators C) members of the House or senators D) the president E) the Speaker of the HouseC Page Ref: 378 Edition: National96
178875578398) Most bills formally submitted for consideration in Congress A) are passed and signed into law. B) are passed, but vetoed by the president. C) are defeated in close final votes on the floors of one chamber. D) are quietly killed off early in the process. E) pass one house, but are killed in the other house.D Page Ref: 378 Edition: National97
178875578599) Basically, Congress is a(n) ________ decision-making body. A) reactive and cumbersome B) active and smooth C) unified and consistent D) radical and hasty E) retroactiveA Page Ref: 378 Edition: National98
1788755786100) The presidentʹs most common method of attempting to influence Congress is to A) call up wavering members. B) offer to campaign for members. C) hold regular meetings with the partyʹs leaders in Congress. D) invite members of Congress to the White House. E) use the veto power.C Page Ref: 379 Edition: National99
1788755787101) Presidential leadership of Congress in promoting the chief executiveʹs programs is A) dominant, with a heavy hand usually convincing wavering members. B) a smooth, generally successful enterprise. C) at the margins, as a facilitator. D) nonexistent. E) proactive, substantive, and adversarial.C Page Ref: 379 Edition: National100
1788755788102) The parties in Congress are most cohesive A) on foreign policy issues. B) when electing their official leaders. C) on economic policy. D) military matters. E) during floor votes.B Page Ref: 380 Edition: National101
1788755790103) The English politician and philosopher Edmund Burke favored the concept of legislators as ________, using their best judgment to make policy in the interests of the people. A) constituent robots B) trustees C) instructed delegates D) politicos E) judgesB Page Ref: 380 Edition: National102
1788755791104) Some prefer the concept of legislators as ________, mirroring the preferences of their constituents. A) trustees B) politicos C) instructed delegates D) uninstructed delegates E) pollstersC Page Ref: 380 Edition: National103
1788755792105) The best way constituents can influence congressional voting on legislation is to A) sign petitions. B) write letters or send telegrams. C) fax or call in their opinions. D) elect a representative or senator who agrees with their views. E) demonstrate on the steps of the capitol.D Page Ref: 380 Edition: National104
1788755794106) On a typical issue, the primary determinant of a congressional memberʹs vote is A) constituent preferences as indicated by extensive polling. B) the position of the president. C) personal ideology. D) the toss of a coin. E) the position of their party leaders.C Page Ref: 382 Edition: National105
1788755795107) Legislators who use their best judgment to make policy in the interests of the people are called A) trustees. B) instructed delegates. C) politicos. D) attentive leaders. E) opinion leaders.A Page Ref: 380 Edition: National106
1788755796108) Most members of Congress would be considered A) trustees. B) instructed delegates. C) politicos. D) ambassadors. E) attentive leaders.C Page Ref: 380 Edition: National107
1788755797109) Constituencies influence policy mostly by A) the initial choice of the representative. B) influencing congressional leaders. C) empowering the president in his negotiations with Congress. D) buying votes through election contributions. E) lobbying Senators.A Page Ref: 380 Edition: National108
1788755799110) Which of the following statements about constituency influence is FALSE? A) It is difficult even for well-intentioned legislators to know what people want. B) Legislators whose votes on routine issues are out of step with their constituents are rarely reelected. C) On some controversial issues, legislators ignore constituent opinion at great peril. D) On obscure issues legislators can safely ignore constituency opinion. E) Letters received by legislators are more likely to convey extremist rather than moderate opinions.B Page Ref: 380; 382 Edition: National109
1788755800111) In the relationship between lobbyists and members of Congress, A) members of Congress can ignore and embarrass lobbyists. B) lobbyists hold the greater power. C) members of Congress depend on lobbyists for reelection. D) lobbyists pay members of Congress to pass or defeat bills. E) lobbyists spend most of their efforts on converting opponents to their cause.A Page Ref: 382-383 Edition: National110
1788755801112) If Congress has increased the scope of government it is because A) members typically suffer from Potomac fever. B) members are by-spending liberals. C) that is what constituencies want. D) that is what Congressional staffers want. E) it is responding to the policy expertise provided by the bureaucracy.C Page Ref: 384-385 Edition: National True/False Questions111
17887558021) The typical member of the House of Representatives serves on six committees and subcommittees, the typical senator is a member of ten committees.TRUE Page Ref: 354 Edition: National112
17887558042) It is difficult for Congress to get anything done.TRUE Page Ref: 354 Edition: National113
17887558053) To serve in the United States Senate one must be at least thirty years old.TRUE Page Ref: 355 Edition: National114
17887558064) Most members of Congress are Protestants.TRUE Page Ref: 356 Edition: National115
17887558075) House incumbents tend to be more vulnerable in election contests than Senate incumbents.FALSE Page Ref: 358 Edition: National116
17887558086) More than 90 percent of the incumbents in the House of Representatives seeking reelection win.TRUE Page Ref: 358 Edition: National117
17887558097) Only about 20 percent of Americans can accurately guess how their representative voted on an issue in Congress.TRUE Page Ref: 359 Edition: National118
17887558108) Members of Congress are not substantially affected in their reelection bids by the ups and downs of the economy.TRUE Page Ref: 360 Edition: National119
17887558119) Most congressional advertising takes place between elections and takes the form of contact with constituents.TRUE Page Ref: 360 Edition: National120
178875581310) In congressional elections, challengers receive more PAC money than incumbents.FALSE Page Ref: 362 Edition: National121
178875581411) PACs often make contributions AFTER electionsTRUE Page Ref: 362 Edition: National122
178875581512) Most PACs give less than the $5,000 limit to candidates.TRUE Page Ref: 362 Edition: National123
178875581613) In open races, candidates who spend the most usually win.TRUE Page Ref: 362 Edition: National124
178875581714) The Congress is a unicameral legislature.FALSE Page Ref: 365 Edition: National125
178875581815) The House of Representatives is more institutionalized, centralized, and hierarchical than the Senate.TRUE Page Ref: 365 Edition: National126
178875581916) Filibusters occur in the Senate, but not the House.TRUE Page Ref: 366 Edition: National127
178875582017) Sixty senators present and voting can halt a filibuster by voting for cloture on debate.TRUE Page Ref: 366 Edition: National128
178875582218) If a bill passes both the House and the Senate, but in different forms, it goes to a joint committee.FALSE Page Ref: 369 Edition: National129
178875582319) Select committees have membership drawn from both houses of Congress.FALSE Page Ref: 369 Edition: National130
178875582420) The House still strictly follows the seniority system, wherein the majority party member of the committee who has served the longest automatically serves as chair.FALSE Page Ref: 373 Edition: National131
178875582521) Congress is less likely to exercise its oversight powers when it is controlled by the presidentʹs party.TRUE Page Ref: 371 Edition: National132
178875582622) The explosion of caucuses in Congress has made the representation of interest groups in Congress a more direct process.TRUE Page Ref: 375 Edition: National133
178875582723) As part of the congressional reforms of the 1970s, Congress substantially decreased its oversight activities.FALSE Page Ref: 372 Edition: National134
178875582824) In voting on bills in Congress, differences between the parties are sharpest on questions of social welfare and economic policy.TRUE Page Ref: 380 Edition: National135
178875582925) The strongest influence on how a member of the House of Representatives will vote is his or her party leadership.FALSE Page Ref: 381;382 Edition: National 529136
178875583026) Because most issues are controversial to their constituents back home, legislators seldom cast votes based on their own ideology as the prime determinant.FALSE Page Ref: 382 Edition: National Short Answer Questions137
17887558311) What are franking privileges, and why are they sometimes controversial?the free use of the mail system to communicate with constituents Page Ref: 354 Edition: National138
17887558322) A senator must be at least ________ years of age, a member of the House at least ________.30: 25 Page Ref: 355 Edition: National139
17887558333) What is the dominant prior occupation for members of Congress?law Page Ref: 356 Edition: National140
17887558344) The single most important fact about congressional elections is that ________.incumbents usually win Page Ref: 358 Edition: National141
17887558355) Members of Congress helping constituents as individuals by cutting through some bureaucratic red tape is known as ________.casework Page Ref: 361 Edition: National142
17887558366) Compare and contrast casework and pork barrel.Casework includes activities of members of Congress that help constituents as individuals, such as cutting through bureaucratic red tape. Pork barrel includes the list of federal projects, grants and contracts available to cities, businesses, colleges and institutions available in a congressional district. Page Ref: 361 Edition: National143
17887558387) Why, according to Fiorina, is credit-claiming more effective than position-taking for incumbents?Answers will vary. Page Ref: 360 Edition: National144
17887558398) What is the role of party identification in congressional elections?Although party loyalty at the voting booth is not as strong as it was a generation ago, it is still a good predictor of voting behavior, with nearly 90 percent of voters who identify with a party voting for the House candidate of their party. Page Ref: 363 Edition: National145
17887558409) To increase change in the membership of Congress, several states enacted ________ in the 1980s.term limitations Page Ref: 365 Edition: National146
178875584110) What are the arguments for and against congressional term limitations?Answers will vary. Page Ref: 365 Edition: National147
178875584211) What are the functions of the House Rules Committee?gives each bill a rule that determines when the bill gets on the calendar, allows time for debate and sometimes specifies the kind of amendments that may be offered Page Ref: 365 Edition: National148
178875584312) A(n) ________ consists of tying up the legislative agenda with continuous speeches on the floor so a bill you oppose cannot come to a vote.filibuster Page Ref: 366 Edition: National149
178875584413) What is a filibuster, and how is it used?a strategy unique to the Senate whereby opponents of a piece of legislation try to talk it to death, based on the tradition of unlimited debate Page Ref: 366 Edition: National150
178875584614) Compare and contrast the roles of majority leader, minority leader, and party whips.The majority leader is the principal partisan ally of the Speaker of the House or the partyʹs manager in the Senate. The minority leader is the principal leader of the minority party in the House of Representatives or in the Senate. Whips are party leaders who work with the majority leader or minority leader to count votes beforehand and lean on waverers whose votes are crucial to a bill favored by the party. Page Ref: 368 Edition: National151
178875584715) ________ are formed when the Senate and the House pass a particular bill in different forms.Conference committees Page Ref: 369 Edition: National152
178875584816) ________ gives Congress the power to pressure executive branch agencies and secure compliance with congressional wishes.Oversight Page Ref: 371 Edition: National153
178875584917) How does Congress perform its oversight function?Answers will vary. Page Ref: 371 Edition: National154
178875585018) What is the seniority system, and how has it changed over the years?Answers will vary. Page Ref: 373-374 Edition: National155
178875585119) An informal grouping of members of Congress who band together sharing some interest or characteristic is called a(n) ________, and there are over 100 such groups.caucus Page Ref: 374 Edition: National156
178875585220) Describe the relative size of personal staff, as opposed to committee staff and staff agencies. What does personal staff generally devote their time to?Answers will vary. Page Ref: 375-376; 378 Edition: National157
178875585421) The ________ responds to congressional requests for information, and provides members with nonpartisan research.Congressional Research Service Page Ref: 376 Edition: National158
178875585522) The ________ reviews the activities of the executive branch to see if it is following the congressional intent of laws, and investigates the efficiency and effectiveness of policy implementation.General Accountability Office Page Ref: 375 Edition: National159
178875585623) What is the difference between the role of legislators as trustees, instructed delegates, and politicos?Trustees use their best judgment to make policy in the interests of the people, while instructed delegates mirror the preferences of their constituents and politicos adopt both trustee and instructed delegate roles as they strive to be both representatives and policymakers. Page Ref: 380 Edition: National Essay Questions160

Unit 2 The Road to Revolution Flashcards

CH2 Road to Revolution American Revolution and forming of the government

Terms : Hide Images
921337531French Indian Wara war between England (and Colonists) and France (and Native Americans) (The British wanted to take french land and fur trade in French America. the Indians sided with France for fear that they would take their land)0
921337532the Proclomation of 1763It prohibited American immigration past the Appalachian Mountains (after French-Indian war, Britain was having money trouble, and by not encroaching on Indian homeland, they figured they could avoid another war, but with the natives)1
921337533Common SenseA pamphlet written by Thomas Paine, published in 1776, the message was that it was common sense that America break away from britain and was particularly successful, especially with middle and lower class colonists2
921337534The Sugar ActA law passed by Parliament in 1764 that placed a tax on sugar, molasses, and other products shippped to the colonies, also called harsh punishment of smugglers.3
921337535The Stamp Acta law passed by the British Parliament in 1765 requiring colonists to pay a tax on newspapers, pamphlets, legal documents, and playing cards4
921337536The Townshed Actsplaced duties on imported glass, lead, paints, paper, and tea5
921337537The Declaratory ActParliament had the right to tax and make laws for the colonies "in all cases whatsoever"6
921337538The Intolerable ActsCreated to punish Massachusetts colonists for the Boston Tea Party. These restrictions led to more anger towards Great Britain. It consisted of the Port Bill, the Quartering Act, limits on town meetings, and British officials being tried in Great Britain for crimes committed in the colonies.7
921337539The Quartering ActColonists were forced to feed and house British soldiers if necessary. Colonists were angry because they violated their privacy and the security of their homes.8
921337540Accomplishments of the first Continental Congress-Decided to boycott all British goods and not to export to the UK -Protested Intollerable Acts -Formed Militia9
921337541Accomplishments of the second Continental Congress-Appointed George Washington as head of the military -Wrote Declaration of Independence10
921337542The Four Parts of The Declaration of Independence1. Preamble (States why independence is necessary) 2. Declaration of Natural Rights (States what the colonists believed to be Natural rights of all (white) men (not women though...)) 3. List of Grievances (A list of things that the colonists didn't like about the British rule) 4. Resolution of Independence (States independence from Britain)11
921337543other names for a LoyalistTories, King's Men, Royalists, Redcoats12
921337544MilitiaCivilians trained as soldiers but not part of the regular army13
921337545LoyalistsAmerican colonists who remained loyal to Britain and opposed the war for independence14
921337546PatriotsAmerican colonists who were determined to fight the British until American independence was won15
921350314Samuel AdamsFounder of the Sons of Liberty and one of the most vocal patriots for independence; signed the Declaration of Independence.16
921354141Taxation without Representationforcing people to pay taxes when they have no say in the making of the laws17
921360272Boston Tea Partydemonstration (1773) by citizens of Boston who (disguised as Indians) raided three British ships in Boston harbor and dumped hundreds of chests of tea into the harbor18
921362031Boston MassacreThe first bloodshed of the American Revolution, as British guards at the Boston Customs House opened fire on a crowd killing five Americans19
921400083boycottrefusal to buy or sell certain products or services20
921400084Battle of Bunker Hillfirst major battle of the American Revolution; took place outside Boston21
921400085Paul Reveresilversmith from Boston who is usually credited with warning minutemen "The British are Coming!"22
921400086Lexington and Concordfirst shots of the American Revolution were fired here23
921400087Pontiac's Rebelliona 1763 conflict between Native Americans and the British over settlement of Indian lands in the Great Lakes area.24
921400088Committees of Correspondence (Sam Adams)organized network for passing along news of British activity to the colonies.25
921400089Sons of LibertyEarly group of revolutionaries that shame colonists for cooperation with the British. They used the press very wisely and decided that parliaments laws were irrelevant.26
921400090Albany Plan of Unionan American colonial response to the French. This gave American Congress the right to carry out diplomatic relations with the Native American tribes, control public territory, raise an army, and tax colonial citizens. However, was not accepted.27

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