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Ch 3 - Federalism

Ch 3 - Federalism. Do Now. Get your chapter 3 notes out. I’m checking notes! Open a textbook to pages 78-79. Answer both critical thinking questions. Also, define “Federalism”. Check your homework!. Define “concurrent powers.”

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Ch 3 - Federalism

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  1. Ch 3 - Federalism

  2. Do Now • Get your chapter 3 notes out. I’m checking notes! • Open a textbook to pages 78-79. Answer both critical thinking questions. • Also, define “Federalism”

  3. Check your homework! • Define “concurrent powers.” • Identify five areas of responsibility in which the national government has distinct powers. • Identify five areas of responsibility in which state and local governments have primary responsibility. • Identify five areas of responsibility in which the different levels of government have concurrent powers. • Identify three areas of responsibility in which powers are denied to the national government. • Identify three areas of responsibility in which powers are denied to state governments.

  4. But did you understand this? • Explain the Tenth Amendment’s effect on the extent of states’ rights. • Explain how the Eleventh Amendment affected state sovereignty. • Describe the full faith and credit clause (Article IV). • Explain how the full faith and credit clause affects state sovereignty. • Describe the privileges and immunities clause (Article IV). • Explain how the privileges and immunities clause favors a nation-centered perspective. • Explain one advantage and one disadvantage of the privileges and immunities clause. • Describe one exception to the privileges and immunities clause.

  5. …and some Supreme Court Cases Describe the major holding and the significance for states’ rights in each of the following: • McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) • Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) • Barron v. Baltimore (1833). • DredScott v. Sandford (1857). • United States v. Lopez (1995). • United States v. Morrison (2000). • Alabama v. Garrett (2001). • United States v. Windsor (2013).

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