The protection of civil rights and liberties in the US today Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the 4 means of protecting rights that will be discussed in this chapter?

A
  • The constitution
  • The BoR
  • Other constitutional amendments
  • SC rulings
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2
Q

What type of rights are protected by the 1787 original constitution?

A

Institutional rights

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3
Q

List some of these institutional rights

A
  • The right of all states to play a role in electing the president and members of congress
  • The right of congress to make laws, notably through the elastic/necessary and proper clause
  • The creation of an independent judiciary through security of salary and tenure
  • Embedded throughout the document is the structure of checks and balances and the separation of powers, which upholds the right to freedom from tyranny
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4
Q

Where are the most prominent personal and civil rights found?

A

In the BoR, rather than the 7 articles of original constitution

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5
Q

What has been the significance of the BoR for the SC?

A

It has been the basis for many of its decisions on civil rights

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6
Q

What statement does the 1st amendment begin with?

A

‘Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or the free exercise thereof’

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7
Q

Why was this issue so important for the FF?

A

Because religious freedom had not been present in many of the countries they had come from

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8
Q

What do Evangelical Christians say in criticism of how the SC has upheld and interpreted this part of the 1st amendment?

A

That they focus too much on the establishment clause at the expense of the free exercise clause

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9
Q

Until when was the court largely silent on this civil liberties issue?

A

They only really began to intervene here between the 1960s and the 1990s

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10
Q

What did the court rule when it intervened on this issue during this period?

A

It ruled overtly that Christian practises in US state run schools were unconstitutional as they constituted an establishment of religion

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11
Q

What other freedom does the 1st amendment talk about?

A

Freedom of speech

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12
Q

What does the 1st amendment say about freedom of speech?

A

‘Congress shall make no law adbridging freedom of speech, or the press’

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13
Q

Why was 2008 a significant year for the relationship between the SC and the 2nd amendment?

A

Arguably for the first time in its history, it ruled on a case relating to the meaning of the 2nd amendment regarding individual gun ownership rights

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14
Q

What does the 2nd amendment say about guns?

A

‘A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed’

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15
Q

What are the two differing interpretations around the 2nd amendment?

A

Some see it as a collective right to gun ownership only in the form of state militias. Others see it as guaranteeing an individual right to own guns. They argue that because all the other rights in the BoR are individual rather than collective, the 2nd amendment shall be interpreted in the same way

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16
Q

What kind of people and groups take the view that the 2nd amendment refers to a collective right to bear arms?

A

This is the view taken by most liberals, Ds and supporters of gun control legislation, such as the Brady Centre to Prevent Gun Violence and Everytown for Gun Safety

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17
Q

What kind of people and groups take the view that the 2nd amendment refers to a individual right to bear arms?

A

This is the view taken by most conservatives, Rs and groups who oppose most gun control legislation, like the NRA

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18
Q

What does the 5th amendment state?

A

That in no case should anyone be compelled to be a witness against themselves

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19
Q

In how many states is the death penalty legal?

A

28

20
Q

Which state is the most likely to execute those who have been found guilty of a capital crime?

A

Texas

21
Q

Give some examples of capital crimes

A

Murder, crimes against humanity, genocide, treason or war crimes

22
Q

Which states are more likely to support execution?

A

Southern states

23
Q

Which states are more likely to shun execution?

A

Northeastern states

24
Q

What did the federal government resume in 2020?

A

Using the death penalty for those tried and convicted of a federal crime

25
Q

How many of these executions had been carried out by the US government by the end of 2020?

A

10

26
Q

What are the most important post BoR amendments in terms of the protection of civil rights and liberties?

A

The Reconstruction Amendments (13th and 15th) and the 24th amendment

27
Q

When was the 24th amendment passed?

A

1964

28
Q

What type of rights did these amendments protect in particular?

A

The rights of minorities, most specifically blacks

29
Q

What did the 13th amendment do?

A

Protected all Americans from slavery, irrespective of past or race

30
Q

How did the 14th amendment extend the 13th?

A

By giving full citizenship to all those born or naturalised in the US

31
Q

What two things did the 14th amendment promise that are particular important for the discussion of civil rights?

A
  • Equal protection of the laws to all citizens
  • The requirement for due process of law
  • These have proved to be the touchstone for many landmark cases on individual rights
32
Q

What did the 14th amendment make it illegal for any state to do?

A

To deprive a person of life, liberty or property

33
Q

How did this reinforce the 5th amendment?

A

Because it extended its scope from the protection of individual rights from federal government to state governments as well

34
Q

Give an example of a landmark case that was decided upon the grounds of equal protection?

A

Roe v Wade (1973)

35
Q

When was the 15th amendment ratified?

A

1870

36
Q

What did it do?

A

Granted the right to vote irrespective of race. It allowed all US males to vote, at least in theory. However, the reality, especially in many areas of the south, was different

37
Q

What methods did southern states use to effectively disenfranchise black voters?

A

Literacy tests and poll taxes

38
Q

How was this finally stopped?

A

Due to the growth of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s

39
Q

What did the 24th amendment do?

A

Forbade the denial of the franchise on the basis of the non payment of any tax

40
Q

When was the 19th amendment ratified?

A

1919

41
Q

What did it do?

A

Granted women equal voting and political rights to men

42
Q

When was the 26th amendment ratified?

A

1971

43
Q

What did it do?

A

Lowered the voting age from 21 to 18

44
Q

Why can it be said that these constitutional civil rights mean nothing in isolation?

A

Because their implementation has relied upon a long sequence of landmark SC decisions

45
Q

What type interpretation of the text has this generally required?

A

Loose constructionist

46
Q
A