A | B |
civics | study of citizenship and government |
citizen | member of a community with a government and laws |
purpose of government | keep order and provide services |
dictatorship | controlled by one person, usually with the most guns |
absolute monarchy | ruled by a king or queen |
constitutional monarchy | king or queen, but elected legislature makes laws |
authoritarian gov't | ruled by small group, ex. Communists |
direct democracy | all citizens vote on issues |
representative democracy | citizens elect others to vote for them on certain issues |
republic | other name for representative democracy |
naturalization | process by which aliens become citizens |
alien | a non-citizen |
Latin America | source of largest immigration in the late 20th century |
census | population count taken every 10 years |
Magna Carta | signed by King John in 1215. Limited kings powers. |
Glorious Revolution (1688) | King James II taken off the throne by Parliament and replaced with daughter Mary and her husband William |
precedent | the way it was done in the past |
common law | unwritten law based on precedent |
Parliament | British legislature that gradually gained power from the monarchy |
House of Burgesses | representative democracy established in Jamestown, Virginia in 1619 |
Mayflower Compact | est a direct democracy for settlers at Plymouth, Mass |
mercantilism | economic policy that stated that a nation must export more than it imports |
French and Indian War | resulted in France's loss of Canada to the British |
Philidelphia | where Continental Congresses met |
First Continental Congress | drew up list of complaints against Parliament and sent them to King George III |
Second Continental Congress | Declaration of Independence written |
Common Sense | Thomas Paine's pamphlet encouraging independence |
Jean Jacques Rousseau | social contract and popular sovereignty |
John Locke | natural rights - life, liberty, property |
5 years | how long an alien must live in the US before applying for citizenship |