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  • By the People: Debating American Government, Brief Edition

    By the People by Morone, James A.; Kersh, Rogan;

    Debating American Government, Brief Edition

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    • Kiadás sorszáma 4
    • Kiadó OUP USA
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2019. március 21.

    • ISBN 9780190928728
    • Kötéstípus Puhakötés
    • Terjedelem648 oldal
    • Méret 255x205x23 mm
    • Súly 1168 g
    • Nyelv angol
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    About the Authors
    Preface
    PART I IDEAS AND RIGHTS
    1. Ideas That Shape American Politics
    BY THE NUMBERS American Ideas
    The Spirit of American Politics
    Who Governs?
    How Does American Politics Work?
    Ideas
    Institutions
    Interests
    Individuals
    What Does Government Do
    Who Are We?
    A Nation of Ideas
    Liberty
    ?The Land of the Free?
    The Two Sides of Liberty
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? NEGATIVE VERSUS POSITIVE
    LIBERTY
    The Idea of Freedom Is Always Changing
    Self-Rule
    One Side of Self-Rule: Democracy
    Another Side of Self-Rule: A Republic
    A Mixed System
    Limited Government
    The Origins of Limited Government
    And Yet . . . the United States Has a Big Government
    Limits on Government Action
    When Ideas Clash: Self-Rule and Limited Government
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? SELF-RULE VERSUS LIMITED
    GOVERNMENT
    Individualism
    Community Versus Individualism
    The Roots of American Individualism: Opportunity and Discord
    Golden Opportunity
    Social Conflict
    Who We Are: Individualism and Solidarity?
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? INDIVIDUALISM VERSUS SOLIDARITY
    The American Dream
    Spreading the Dream
    Challenging the Dream
    Is the System Tilted Toward the Wealthy?
    INFO/DATA Most Americans Believe There Is ?Opportunity to Get Ahead?
    Does the American Dream Promote the Wrong Values?
    Equality
    Three Types of Equality
    How Much Economic Inequality Is Too Much?
    Opportunity or Outcome?
    Religion
    Still a Religious Country
    So Many Religions
    The Politics of Religion
    How Do Ideas Affect Politics?
    Ideas in American Culture
    The Ideas in Political Institutions
    Culture or Institutions?
    Conclusion: Culture and Institutions, Together
    Chapter Summary
    Key Terms
    Study Questions
    2 The Constitution
    BY THE NUMBERS The Constitution
    The Colonial Roots of the Constitution
    Why the Colonists Revolted
    The Colonial Complaint: Representation
    The Conflict Begins with Blood on the Frontier
    The Stamp Tax and the First Hints of Independence
    The Townshend Acts Worsen the Conflict
    The Boston Tea Party
    Revolution!
    A Long Legacy
    The Declaration of Independence
    The Principle: ?We Hold These Truths . . .?
    Grievances
    The First American Government: The Articles of Confederation
    The National Government
    Some Success . . .
    . . . And Some Problems
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? YOUR ADVICE IS NEEDED
    Secrecy
    The Constitutional Convention
    How Much Power to the People?
    National Government Versus State Government
    Big States Versus Small States
    The Virginia Plan
    The New Jersey Plan
    The Connecticut Compromise
    The President
    Committee or Individual?
    The Electoral College
    Separation of Powers
    ?A Principle of Which We Were Ashamed?
    The Three-Fifths Compromise
    The Slave Trade
    Fugitive Slaves
    ?The National Calamity?
    An Overview of the Constitution
    Preamble
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? HAVE WE ACHIEVED THE CONSTITUTION'S GOALS TODAY?
    Article 1: Congress
    Article 2: The President
    Article 3: The Courts
    Article 4: Relations Between the States
    Article 5: Amendments
    Article 6: The Law of the Land
    Article 7: Ratification
    The Missing Articles
    Ratification
    The Anti-Federalists
    The Federalists
    Two Strong Arguments
    A Very Close Vote
    Changing the Constitution
    The Bill of Rights
    The Seventeen Amendments
    The Constitution Today
    INFO/DATA Amend the Constitution Today? On What Issue?
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? HOW STRICTLY SHOULD WE INTERPRET THE CONSTITUTION?
    Conclusion: Does the Constitution Still Work?
    Chapter Summary
    Key Terms
    Study Questions
    3 Federalism and Nationalism
    BY THE NUMBERS Federalism
    Forging Federalism
    Who Holds Government Authority?
    Advantages of State-Level Policy
    The Advantages of National Policy
    INFO/DATA: Regulatory Policies Differ By State
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? PRESERVING LOCAL VALUES OR PROMOTING CONSISTENT NATIONAL POLICY?
    How Federalism Works
    The Constitution Sets the Ground Rules
    The Constitution Empowers National Authority
    The Constitution Protects State Authority
    The Constitution Authorizes Shared Power
    Dual Federalism (1789-1933)
    Cooperative Federalism (1933-1981)
    New Federalism
    Progressive Federalism
    Education
    Healthcare
    Federalism Today
    Issues in Federalism
    Unfunded Mandates
    Drowned in the Bathtub? Reducing the Federal Government
    Federalism in the Courts
    Nationalism, American Style
    The Rise of American Nationalism
    America's Weak National Government
    Size
    Authority
    Independence
    Conclusion: Who Are We?
    Chapter Summary
    Key Terms
    Study Questions
    4 Civil Liberties
    BY THE NUMBERS Civil Liberties
    The Rise of Civil Liberties
    Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
    The Purpose of Civil Liberties
    The Slow Rise of Civil Liberties
    Privacy
    Penumbras and Emanations
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? IS THERE A RIGHT TO PRIVACY?
    Roe v. Wade
    Planned Parenthood v. Casey
    Sex Between Consenting Adults
    Clashing Principles
    Freedom of Religion
    The Establishment Clause
    Free Exercise of Religion
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? MAY THE CHRISTIAN YOUTH CLUB MEET IN SCHOOL?
    Freedom of Speech
    A Preferred Position
    Political Speech
    TEST YOURSELF: THE SIMPSONS VERSUS THE FIRST AMENDMENT: WHICH DO YOU KNOW BETTER?
    Symbolic Speech
    Limits to Free Speech: Fighting Words
    Limited Protections: Student Speech
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? FREE SPEECH ON CAMPUS
    Freedom of the Press
    Prior Restraint
    Obscenity
    Libel
    The Right to Bear Arms
    INFO/DATA Guns on Campus
    A Relic of the Revolution?
    The Palladium of All Liberties?
    INFO/DATA: GUNS ON CAMPUS
    The Rights of the Accused
    The Fourth Amendment: Search and Seizure
    The Fifth Amendment: Rights at Trials
    The Sixth Amendment: The Right to Counsel
    The Eighth Amendment: The Death Penalty
    Terrorism, Non-Citizens, and Civil Liberties
    Contacts with Forbidden Groups
    Surveillance
    The Rights of Non-Citizens
    Conclusion: The Dilemma of Civil Liberties
    Chapter Summary
    Key Terms
    Study Questions
    5 The Struggle for Civil Rights
    BY THE NUMBERS Civil Rights
    Winning Rights: The Political Process
    Seven Steps to Political Equality
    How the Courts Review Cases
    Suspect Categories
    Quasi-Suspect Categories
    Nonsuspect Categories
    Race and Civil Rights: Revolt Against Slavery
    The Clash Over Slavery
    Abolition
    Economics
    Politics
    Dred Scott v. Sandford
    The Second American Founding: A New Birth of Freedom?
    Freedom Fails
    The Fight for Racial Equality
    Two Types of Discrimination
    The Modern Civil Rights Campaign Begins
    The Courts
    The Civil Rights Movement
    Congress and the Civil Rights Act
    The Post Civil Rights Era
    Affirmative Action in the Workplace
    Affirmative Action in Education
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? HIGHER EDUCATION AND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
    Women's Rights
    Suffrage
    The Civil Rights Act of 1964
    Equal Rights Amendment
    The Courts
    Progress for Women-But How Much?
    Hispanics
    Challenging Discrimination
    The Politics of Immigration
    Ancient Fears
    Three Categories
    Undocumented Immigrants
    Language Controversy: Speak English!
    Political Mobilization
    Asian Americans
    Native Americans
    The Lost Way of Life
    Indians and the Federal Government
    Social Problems and Politics
    Groups Without Special Protection
    People with Disabilities
    Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
    INFO/DATA: 5.1
    The Fight for Civil Rights Goes On
    Voting Rights Today
    Economic and Social Rights Today
    Health
    Income
    Incarceration
    Conclusion: Civil Rights . . . By the People
    Chapter Summary
    Key Terms
    Study Questions
    PART II POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
    6 Public Opinion and Political Participation
    Sources of Public Opinion
    BY THE NUMBERS Public Opinion and Political Participation
    Political Socialization
    Parents and Friends
    Education
    Gender
    Race
    Religion
    Life Events
    Party
    Self-Interest: Voting Our Pocketbooks
    Elite Influence
    Wars and Other Focusing Events
    Measuring Public Opinion
    Polling Bloopers
    Polling 101
    Refining the sample
    Timing
    Wording
    Lies, Damn Lies, and Polls
    Technology and Error
    Sampling Error and Response Bias
    TALKING POLITICS TYPES OF POLLS
    Do Opinion Surveys Influence Us?
    Public Opinion in a Democracy
    Ignorant Masses
    The Rational Public
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? CAN WE TRUST THE PUBLIC?
    Do the People Know What They Want?
    How Do the People Communicate Their Desires?
    Do Leaders Respond to Public Opinion?
    Getting Involved: Political Participation
    Traditional Participation
    Voting
    Electoral Activities
    Civic Voluntarism
    Direct Action
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? WOULD YOU HAVE PROTESTED?
    Why Do People Get Involved?
    Background: Age, Wealth, Education, and Race
    Age
    Wealth
    Education
    Race
    Friends and Family
    Community
    Political Mobilization
    Government Beneficiaries
    Historical Context
    TALKING POLITICS HOW MOBILIZERS SEE US
    INFO/DATA Higher Engagement and Ideology
    What Discourages Political Participation?
    Alienation
    Institutional Barriers
    Complacency
    Shifting Mobilization Patterns
    New Avenues for Participation: The Internet, Social Media, and Millennial Participation
    Scenario 1: Rebooting Democracy
    Scenario 2: More Hype and Danger Than Democratic Renaissance
    Does Social Media Increase Political Participation?
    How the Millennial Generation Participates
    Conclusion: Government by the People
    Chapter Summary
    Study Questions
    Key Terms
    7 Media, Technology, and Government
    BY THE NUMBERS The Media
    The Media and American Democracy
    Providing Information
    Watching Political Leaders
    Shaping the Political Agenda
    U.S. Media Today: Traditional Formats Are Declining
    Where People Go for News
    Newspapers and Magazines: Rise and Decline
    The First Mass Media
    Should We Worry?
    Radio Holds Steady
    Television: From News to Infotainment
    The Rise of Cable
    Infotainment
    The Rise of the New Media
    Is the Media Biased?
    Reporters Are Democrats
    Profits Drive the News Industry
    Drama Delivers Audiences
    Sex and Scandal
    Investigative ?Bias?
    How Governments Shape the Media
    The First Amendment Protects Print Media from Regulation
    Regulating Broadcasters
    Protecting Competition
    INFO/DATA Media Consolidation
    Understanding the Media in Context: War,
    Terrorism, and U.S. Elections
    Covering Wars and Terrorism
    The Campaign as Drama
    Candidate Profiles
    Conclusion: At the Crossroads of the Media World
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? DOES THE MEDIA ENHANCE
    DEMOCRACY?
    Chapter Summary Study Questions
    8 Campaigns and Elections
    How Democratic Are U.S. Elections?
    BY THE NUMBERS Campaigns and Elections
    Frequent and Fixed Elections
    Over 520,000 Elected Officials
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? TOO MANY ELECTED POSITIONS?
    Financing Campaigns: The New Inequality?
    Too Much Money?
    Democracy for the Rich?
    Major Donors: Easier to Give
    INFO/DATA Money in Elections: The New Rules Bundling
    Presidential Campaigns and Elections
    Who Runs for President?
    The Three Phases of Presidential Elections
    Winning the Nomination
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? WHY IOWA AND NEW HAMPSHIRE?
    Organizing the Convention
    The General Election
    Winning Presidential Elections
    Economic Outlook
    Demographics
    War and Foreign Policy
    Domestic Issues
    The Campaign Organization
    Who Won and Why
    Congressional Elections
    Candidates: Who Runs for Congress?
    The Power of Incumbency
    Congressional Election Results
    Redrawing the Lines: The Art of Gerrymandering
    Nonpartisan Districting and Minority Representation
    How to Run for Congress
    Key 1: Money
    Key 2: Organization
    Key 3: Strategy
    TALKING POLITICS CAMPAIGN LINGO
    Key 4: Message
    Conclusion: Reforming American Elections
    Chapter Summary
    Study Questions
    9 Interest Groups and Political Parties
    The Many Roles Interest Groups Play
    BY THE NUMBERS Interest Groups
    Informing Members
    Communicating Members' Views
    Mobilizing the Public
    What Do Interest Groups Do for Democracy?
    Types of Interest Groups
    Economic Groups
    Citizen or Public Interest Groups
    Intergovernmental and Reverse Lobbying
    Interest Groups and the Federal Government
    The Multiple Roles of Lobbyists
    Researchers
    Witnesses
    Position Takers
    Coalition Builders
    Social Butterflies
    Iron Triangles
    TALKING POLITICS WASHINGTON LOBBYING
    Rise of the Issue Network
    Interest Groups and the Courts
    Lobbying on Judicial Confirmations
    Filing Amicus Curiae (?Friend of Court?) Briefs
    Sponsoring Litigation
    Interest Groups and Power
    Lobbyists in Washington
    Interest Groups' Spending
    INFO/DATA Interest Group Campaign Spending: Sector Totals, 2015-2016
    Political Parties and U.S. Government
    What the Parties Do
    Parties Champion Ideas
    Parties Select Candidates
    Parties Mobilize the Voters
    Parties Organize Governing Activity After the Election
    Parties Help Integrate New Groups into the Political Process
    Two-Party America
    Third Parties in American Politics
    America's Party Systems: Origins and Change
    Beginnings: First Party System (1789-1828)
    Rise: Second Party System (ca. 1828-1860)
    War and Reconstruction: Third Party System (1860-1896)
    Business and Reform: Fourth Party System (1896-1932)
    Depression and New Deal: Fifth Party System (1933-1968)
    The Sixth Party System: The Parties at Equal Strength (1972-Present)
    Party Organization and Identification
    The Party Bureaucracy
    Party in Government
    Party in the Electorate
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? PERSONALITY AND PARTY
    The Power of Party Attachment
    Voting and Participation
    Filtering
    Ideology
    The Big Tent
    Party Competition . . . and Partisanship
    Parties Rise Again
    Partisanship Intensifies
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? PARTISANSHIP
    Competition Increases
    Conclusion: A Political System Ripe for Reform?
    1. Regulating Interest Groups
    2. Reduce Partisanship in Government
    Chapter Summary
    Study Questions
    PART III POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
    10 Congress
    BY THE NUMBERS Congress
    Introducing Congress
    Two Houses, Different Styles
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? SENATE FILIBUSTERS
    The House and Senate Have Some Unique Roles
    Congressional Representation
    Trustees and Delegates
    Do the Right Thing
    Do What the People Want
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? TWO VIEWS OF REPRESENTATION
    Getting to Congress-and Staying There
    The Permanent Campaign
    Home Style: Back in the District
    Congress at Work
    The City on the Hill
    Minnows and Whales: Congressional Leadership
    House Leadership
    Senate Leadership
    Committees: Workhorses of Congress
    The Enduring Power of Committees
    Leadership and Assignments
    Legislative Policymaking
    Drafting a Bill
    Submitting the Bill
    Committee Action
    1. Committees Hold Hearings on Policy Topics
    2. Committees Prepare Legislation for Floor Consideration
    3. Committees Also Kill Legislation
    4. Committees Exercise Oversight
    Floor Action
    Getting to the floor
    On the floor
    The Vote
    Conference Committee
    Presidential Action: Separated Powers, Revisited
    Why Is Congress So Unpopular?
    Partisan Polarization in Congress
    INFO/DATA Historic Partisan Polarization
    Divided Government
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? IS A PARTISAN CONGRESS A GOOD THING?
    Conclusion: Congress and the Challenge of Governing
    Chapter Summary
    Study Questions
    11 The Presidency
    BY THE NUMBERS The Presidency
    Defining the Presidency
    Defined by Controversy
    The President's Powers
    Is the Presidency Too Powerful?
    An Imperial Presidency?
    A Weak Office?
    What Presidents Do
    Commander in Chief
    Top Diplomat
    The First Legislator
    Recommending Measures
    State of the Union
    Presidential ?Batting Average?
    Veto
    Signing Statements
    Chief Bureaucrat
    Appointments
    Executive Orders
    Economist in Chief
    INFO/DATA Executive Orders Issued by Each President, Per Day in Office
    The Head of State
    Party Leader
    The Bully Pulpit: Introducing Ideas
    The Impossible Job
    Presidential Leadership: Success and Failure in the Oval Office
    Managing the Public
    Approval Ratings
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? RANKING THE PRESIDENT
    Presidential Greatness
    Greatness in Context: The Rise and Fall of Political Orders
    Step 1: A New Order Rises
    Step 2: The Order Refreshed
    Step 3: The Old Order Crumbles
    The President's Team: A Tour of the White House
    The Political Solar System: Presidential Appointments
    The Vice President
    The Cabinet
    The Executive Office of the President
    The Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
    The Council of Economic Advisers 3
    The National Security Council (NSC)
    The Heart of Power: The White House Office (WHO)
    TALKING POLITICS SPEAK LIKE A WEST WING INSIDER
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? DO PRESIDENTS NEED SUCH A LARGE STAFF?
    The First Spouse
    Conclusion: The Most Powerful Office on Earth?
    Chapter Summary
    Study Questions
    12 Bureaucracy
    BY THE NUMBERS The Bureaucracy
    How the Bureaucracy Grew
    Birth of the Bureaucracy
    War
    Morality
    Economics
    Geography
    Race and Ethnicity
    The Bureaucratic Model
    Hierarchy
    Division of Labor
    Fixed Routines
    Equal Rules for All
    Technical Qualifications
    Bureaucratic Pathologies
    The Democratic Dilemma
    What Bureaucracies Do
    Rule-Making
    Implementation
    How the Bureaucracy Is Organized
    The Cabinet Departments
    The Rotating Bureaucracy
    Other Agencies
    Executive Agencies
    Independent Regulatory Commissions
    INFO/DATA The Formation of Regulatory Commissions
    An Army of Their Own
    Private Contractors
    Who Controls the Federal Bureaucracy?
    The People
    The President
    Congress
    Interest Groups
    Bureaucratic Autonomy
    Democracy Revisited
    Reforming the Bureaucracy
    Open Up the System
    Reinventing Government
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? SHOULD WE PRIVATIZE MORE GOVERNMENT FUNCTIONS?
    Privatization
    Conclusion: The Real Solution Lies with You
    Chapter Summary
    Study Questions
    13 The Judicial Branch
    Who Are We? A Nation of Laws . . .
    and Lawyers
    Embracing the Law-and Lawsuits
    BY THE NUMBERS The U.S. Judiciary
    Declining Trust
    Courts in American Culture
    Organizing the Judicial Branch
    Divided We Rule
    State and Local Courts
    Judicial Selection
    Federal Courts
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? HOW SHOULD STATES SELECT THEIR JUDGES?
    Specialized Courts
    Diversity in the Federal Judiciary
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? IDENTITY ON THE BENCH
    The Court's Role
    Judicial Review
    Activism Versus Restraint
    The Judicial Process
    Too Much Power?
    Or Still the ?Least Dangerous? Branch?
    The Supreme Court and How It Operates
    Hearing Cases
    Selecting Cases: Formal Requirements
    Selecting Cases: Informal Factors
    Conference Sessions and Written Decisions
    Supreme Court Clerks
    Confirmation Battles
    Judicial Decision Making and Reform
    The Role of Law
    Ideology and Partisanship
    INFO/DATA How Americans View the Supreme Court: Liberal or Conservative?
    Collegiality and Peer Pressure
    Institutional Concerns
    Nineteen Cases You Should Know
    1. Marbury v. Madison (1803)
    2. McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
    3. Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1819)
    4. Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
    5. Santa Clara Co. v. Southern Pacific Railroad (1886)
    6. Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
    7. Lochner v. New York (1905)
    8. Muller v. Oregon (1908)
    9. Schenck v. United States (1919)
    10. National Labor Relations Board v. Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation (1937)
    11. Korematsu v. United States (1944)
    12. Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
    13. Mapp v. Ohio (1961)
    14. Gideon v. Wainwright (1963)
    15. Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971)
    16. Roe v. Wade (1973)
    17. United States v. Nixon (1974)
    18. Bush v. Gore (2000)
    19. National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius (2012)
    The Nineteen Cases-and the Power of the Court
    Conclusion: Democracy and the Courts
    Chapter Summary
    Study Questions
    PART IV POLICYMAKING
    14 Domestic and Foreign Policy
    Public Policymaking in Five (Not-So-Easy) Stages
    1. Agenda Setting
    BY THE NUMBERS U.S. Public Policy
    2. Framing
    3. Policy Formation
    Analyzing Policy, Ex Ante
    From Cost-Benefit Analysis to Politics
    4. Policy Implementation
    Top-Down Delivery
    Bottom-Up Delivery
    5. Policy Evaluation and Feedback
    Policy Feedback
    U.S. Social Policy
    Old-Age Insurance: Social Security
    Unemployment Benefits
    Health and Disability: Medicare/Medicaid
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? SHOULD WE REFORM SOCIAL SECURITY AND MEDICARE?
    INFO/DATA The Federal Budget in Context
    Economic Policymaking: Fiscal and Monetary Policy
    Fiscal Policy
    Monetary Policy
    Economic Policymaking: The Federal Budget Process
    American Foreign-Policy Goals
    American Foreign-Policy Goal No. 1: Security
    Military Primacy
    Soft Power
    Foreign Aid and National Security
    American Foreign-Policy Goal No. 2: Prosperity
    Free Trade Energy
    Economic Weapons
    Foreign-Policy Goal No. 3: Spreading American Ideals
    Who Makes Foreign Policy?
    Congress
    The President
    The State Department
    The Department of Defense
    Intelligence
    The National Security Council
    Success or Fragmentation?
    Grand Strategies in U.S. History
    World War I and Isolationism (1918-1939)
    World War II, the Cold War, and Multilateralism (1942-1989)
    The New World Order (1989-2001)
    The War on Terror (2001-Present)
    WHAT DO YOU THINK? TERRORISTS AND THE RULE OF LAW
    Conclusion: Policy Matters
    Chapter Summary
    Study Questions
    APPENDIX I
    The Declaration of Independence A-1
    APPENDIX II
    The Constitution of the United States of America A-4
    APPENDIX III
    The Federalist Papers nos. 1, 10, and 51 A-25
    APPENDIX IV
    Presidential Elections, Congressional Control, 1789-2016 A-35
    Glossary G-1
    Notes N-1
    Credits C-1
    Index I-1

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