The Federal Judiciary and Supreme Court Flashcards

1
Q

landmark Supreme Court case that established the power of judicial review for the federal courts

A

Marbury v. Madison (1803)

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2
Q

the power of the federal courts to review and declare congressional laws and executive acts void if they conflict with the Constitution

A

judicial review

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3
Q

notion that judges are confined to only applying explicit constitutional rules

A

judicial restraint

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4
Q

notion that judges can discover general constitutional principles, interpret them based on a certain philosophy, and apply them to specific cases

A

judicial activism

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5
Q

the guarantee against arbitrary action by the federal government and state governments

A

due process

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6
Q

the process of questioning and selecting impartial jurors

A

voir dire

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7
Q

principle that individuals in custody should be brought into court and shown the cause for their detention; it cannot be constitutionally suspended except during rebellions or invasions

A

habeas corpus

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8
Q

meaning “to make certain”; the Supreme Court can grant certiorari to review an appeal of a lower court’s decision

A

certiorari

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9
Q

meaning “let the decision stand”; the principle used in the U.S. that precedent should generally determine judicial decisions in similar cases; the notion is that precedent should only be overruled when a court determines that the prior legal reasoning was unsound

A

stare decisis

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10
Q

nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate; they hold lifetime appointments; however, they are subject to removal from office (via congressional impeachment/removal) if they commit criminal offenses or other improprieties

A

federal judges

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11
Q

94 district courts (89 courts in 50 states + DC, Puerto Rico, Guam, U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands); they are the general trial courts of the federal judiciary; they handle both civil and criminal cases; these courts determine facts of a case and the winning party; evidence is presented, and witnesses are examined/cross-examined

A

U.S. District Courts

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12
Q

11 numbered regions (circuits) + the D.C. Circuit + Federal Circuit; they are the courts that hear appeals from district courts; no trials, no witnesses; no testimony; the focus is on procedural errors, not facts of a case

A

U.S. Courts of Appeal

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13
Q

established by Article III of the Constitution; it is the final court of appeal; the Constitution does not set a fixed size of the Supreme Court in the number of justices; in the event of a split decision at the Supreme Court, the lower federal court’s ruling will stand (the Supreme Court will not rehear oral arguments of the same case from the beginning)

A

U.S. Supreme Court

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14
Q

current Chief Justice is John Roberts; the Chief Justice (when in the majority) decides who writes the Court’s opinion

A

chief justice

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15
Q

Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, Ketnaji Brown Jackson

A

associate justices

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