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A system of government in which power resides with the central government |
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Unalienable (inalienable rights) |
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Basic rights of the people that may not be taken away |
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An economic system in which the government owns the primary means of production |
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An implied agreement among the people of an organized society that defines the rights, duties, and limitations of the governed and the government |
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A concept that those who govern are bound by the laws; no one is above the law. |
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A system of government in which the people elect representatives to make policies and laws for them |
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The belief that individuals are born with basic rights that cannot be taken away by governments |
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A system of government in which the king or queen shares authority with an elected legislature and agrees to be bound by a constitution or a set of laws. Also known as a constitutional monarchy. |
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The principle that decisions from the courts are fair and impartial and are not subject to undue influence from the other branches of government |
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A series of essays written to explain and defend the proposed U.S. Constitution |
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A group of people in the early United States who favored the establishment of a strong national government and who worked for ratification of the U.S. Constitution |
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A system of government in which political power resides with the people |
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An agreement made by the people to establish a government and abide by its laws. |
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An official agreement made by two or more parties |
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Beliefs or actions that are seen as a benefit to the larger community rather than individual interests. |
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Legal precedence based on customs and prior legal decisions and is used in civil cases. |
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A legal member of a state and/or country. |
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The power to direct the actions of people or to make decisions |
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A group of people in the early United States who opposed ratification of the U.S. Constitution because they feared a strong national government and a lack of protection for individual rights. |
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A series of essays written to counter and defeat the proposed U.S. Constitution. |
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The absence of any form of government |
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a form of democracy in which the people vote on all issues themselves |
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the principle that a ruler or a government is not all-powerful |
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a group of people that makes laws |
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an agreement among people in a society with their government; the people give up some of their rights in exchange for the government protecting everyone's rights |
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one who opposes official or commonly held views |
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a system for making choices about ways to use scarce resources to make and distribute goods and services to fulfill people's needs and wants |
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the quality or state of being free |
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an official, formal public announcement |
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to refuse to purchase certain goods and services |
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an act of importing or exporting secretly, in violation of the law and especially without paying duty on goods |
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a representative to a meeting |
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