Study Guide for Unit 4:
Institutions
(Congress, Presidency, Judiciary, Bureaucracy, Federal Courts)
Chapter
12: Congress
Questions you should be able to answer:
1. What is
the effect of incumbency in congressional elections? What other factors are
associated with congressional electoral success?
2. What is
the role of money in congressional campaigns? Assess the influence of interest
groups and political action committees (PACs) on members of Congress.
3. How do
the House of Representatives and the Senate differ? How does the structure of
leadership differ between the two?
4. Describe
the committee system in Congress. What are the different roles of committees in
the legislative process?
5. How does
a bill become a law? What factors influence the legislative process and how
does their influence differ?
6. Is
Congress representative in its membership and its policy-making role? What
structures and reforms have affected its representation function?
Terms you should be
able to identify & describe:
incumbents casework
pork barrel quorum
House Rules Committee filibuster
Speaker of the House rider
(nongermane amendment)
hold sunset
laws
standing committees joint committees
conference committees select committees
legislative oversight committee chairs
seniority system caucus
appropriation Appropriations Committee
cloture discharge
petition
Finance Committee franking
privilege
gerrymandering logrolling
open rule closed rule
reapportionment redistricting
Ways and Means Committee constituents
Chapter
13: The Presidency
Questions you should be able to answer:
1. How do
presidents and vice presidents get into office?
2. What are
the formal constitutional powers of the presidency and how have these powers
expanded over the years?
3. How is
the presidency organized? On whom does the president depend for advice about
governmental and policy matters?
4. Explain
the factors that affect presidential leadership of Congress. Why are some
presidents more effective leaders than others?
5. What
roles does the president play as leader of national security policy? How do
these roles conflict with the role of Congress in the area of national
security?
6. What
factors affect presidential popularity and approval? How is popularity related
to power and to policy-making?
7. Why is
the press so important to the president? Give examples of the relationship
between the press and the presidency.
8. How does
the contemporary presidency differ from that envisioned by the Founders? Be
able to take a position on whether or not the president has become too
powerful, and how this might affect democracy and the scope of government.
Terms you should be
able to identify & describe:
22nd Amendment impeachment
impoundment 25th Amendment
cabinet National
Security Council
Council of Economic Advisers Office of Management & Budget
veto pocket
veto
presidential cottails War Powers Resolution
legislative veto line item veto
executive agreement executive privilege
Chapter
15: The Federal Bureaucracy
Questions you should be able to answer:
1. How does
one become a bureaucrat? What myths surround the bureaucracy in the
2. How is
the
3. What is
policy implementation and what are its main features? What factors facilitate
and what factors hinder successful implementation of a public policy? Use
specific examples of implementation to illustrate your points.
4. What is
needed for an agency to perform its regulatory role? What are the pros and cons
of deregulation?
5. How does
politics permeate bureaucracies? What factors make it difficult to control
bureaucracies? What methods are available to the president and Congress to
control bureaucracies?
6. What is
the role of the bureaucracies in the federal system? Is the federal bureaucracy
too big? What are the pros and cons of a large bureaucracy?
Terms you should be
able to identify & describe:
bureaucracy patronage
(spoils system)
civil
service merit
system
independent regulatory agency governmental
corporations
independent executive agencies policy
implementation
regulation deregulation
executive
orders iron triangle
political
appointments red tape
whistleblower
Chapter
16: The Federal Courts
Questions you should be able to answer:
1. Who are
the key participants in the American judicial system and what do they do?
2. Explain
the structure of the American judicial system. What are the differences between
the federal district courts, courts of appeal, and the Supreme Court?
3. What is
the process by which members of the Supreme Court are chosen? How does the
appointment process for other federal courts differ?
4. What are
the typical characteristics of American judges and justices? How do their
background’s and personal characteristics affect their judicial behavior?
5. How do
courts shape public policy in their decisions and in the opinions by judges
used to justify decisions? What effect have the courts had on the policy
agenda? Use historical examples in your answer.
6. How do
court decisions become public policy? What is involved in judicial
implementation? Use examples to illustrate the potential problems of
implementing court decisions.
7. What is
the role of courts in a democracy? What are the major criticisms of the court
system in the
Terms you should be
able to identify & describe:
class
action suits amicus curiae briefs
original
jurisdiction appellate
jurisdiction
senatorial courtesy stare decisis
precedent original intent
judicial
review Marbury v. Madison
judicial
restraint judicial
activism
majority
opinion dissenting
opinion
injunction remand
Rule of
four writ of
certiorari
writ of
habeas corpus writ of
mandamus