c2c0b5e2
Test por , creado hace más de 1 año

Test sobre Ch4 #1-31, creado por c2c0b5e2 el 29/06/2014.

384
0
0
Sin etiquetas
c2c0b5e2
Creado por c2c0b5e2 hace alrededor de 10 años
Cerrar

Ch4 #1-31

Pregunta 1 de 33

1

The individual freedoms in the Bill of Rights were extended by the Fourteenth Amendment to include protection from deprivation of due process rights by

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • actions of the president.

  • the actions of individuals.

  • actions of the federal government.

  • actions of state and local governments.

  • actions of the U.S. military.

Explicación

Pregunta 2 de 33

1

The term civil liberties refers to specific individual rights that

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • apply in civil cases but not in criminal cases.

  • apply in civil cases but not in military ones.

  • are constitutionally protected from infringement by government.

  • are constitutionally protected from infringement by individuals.

  • are not covered by the First Amendment.

Explicación

Pregunta 3 de 33

1

The individual right that is widely regarded as the most basic of individual rights is

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the right to an attorney.

  • freedom of expression.

  • the right to a jury trial.

  • the right to an adequate education.

  • protection against illegal searches and seizures.

Explicación

Pregunta 4 de 33

1

Justice Holmes's "clear and present danger" test holds that government can

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • restrict speech that threatens national security.

  • restrict any speech of an inflammatory nature.

  • imprison political dissidents during time of war without following normal procedures.

  • engage in prior restraint of the press whenever national security is at issue.

  • restrict speech that is disrespectful to specific classes of citizens.

Explicación

Pregunta 5 de 33

1

Like all other rights, the right of free expression is

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • spelled out in precise terms in the Bill of Rights.

  • not absolute.

  • fully respected by public officials.

  • protected from action by federal officials but not state officials.

  • None of these answers is correct.

Explicación

Pregunta 6 de 33

1

The conviction of members of the U.S. Communist Party in the early 1950s was initially upheld as a lawful restriction of the right

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • not to incriminate oneself.

  • of free speech.

  • to a jury trial.

  • to confront one's accusers in a court of law.

  • to worship any religion of choice.

Explicación

Pregunta 7 de 33

1

Justice Stone argued in 1938 that

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • citizens should have priority over non-citizens in the legal system.

  • First Amendment rights are the basis of most other rights.

  • the interests of the majority are more important than the rights of the individual.

  • the requirements of national security take precedence over freedom of expression.

  • the Bill of Rights should be fully applied to the states.

Explicación

Pregunta 8 de 33

1

The Supreme Court's position on prior restraint of the press is that

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • national security needs are of highest priority.

  • only classified government documents are subject to prior restraint.

  • prior restraint can never be exercised by government.

  • prior restraint should apply only in rare circumstances, and it is better to hold the press responsible for what it has printed than to restrict what it may print.

  • prior restraint should be used fairly frequently in a democracy.

Explicación

Pregunta 9 de 33

1

Government can lawfully prevent a political rally from taking place

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • under no circumstances; people have an unconditional right to express their views.

  • when the rally would require unduly expensive police protection.

  • when the views of those holding the rally are unpopular.

  • when it can demonstrate that harmful acts will necessarily result from the rally.

  • None of these answers is correct.

Explicación

Pregunta 10 de 33

1

The inclusion of certain provisions of the Bill of Rights in the Fourteenth Amendment, so that these rights are protected from infringements by the state governments, is called

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the preferred position doctrine.

  • procedural change.

  • selective incorporation.

  • the absorption doctrine.

  • prior restraint.

Explicación

Pregunta 11 de 33

1

The inclusion of certain provisions of the Bill of Rights in the Fourteenth Amendment, so that these rights are protected from infringements by the state governments, is called

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the preferred position doctrine.

  • procedural change.

  • selective incorporation.

  • the absorption doctrine.

  • prior restraint.

Explicación

Pregunta 12 de 33

1

Spoken words that are known to be false and harmful to a person's reputation are an example of

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • libel.

  • slander.

  • blasphemy.

  • obscenity.

  • symbolic speech.

Explicación

Pregunta 13 de 33

1

Which of the following is correct with regard to obscenity and the law?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Obscenity is not protected by the First Amendment.

  • Obscenity is never unlawful.

  • Child pornography is protected by the First Amendment.

  • Obscenity has been easy for courts to define with precision.

  • Obscenity is protected under the Ninth Amendment.

Explicación

Pregunta 14 de 33

1

The establishment clause prohibits government from

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • establishing exceptions to the Bill of Rights.

  • establishing exceptions to the Fourteenth Amendment.

  • favoring one religion over another or supporting religion over no religion.

  • interfering with freedom of assembly.

  • interfering with the right to bear arms.

Explicación

Pregunta 15 de 33

1

The Supreme Court upheld the use of tax-supported vouchers to attend private or parochial school in

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Engel v. Vitale.

  • Griswold v. Connecticut.

  • Zelman v. Simmons-Harris.

  • Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition.

  • Miller v. California.

Explicación

Pregunta 16 de 33

1

According to the Supreme Court, prayer in public schools violates

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the free exercise clause.

  • the establishment clause.

  • the exclusionary rule.

  • procedural due process.

  • the clear and present danger test.

Explicación

Pregunta 17 de 33

1

According to the Supreme Court, prayer in public schools violates

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the free exercise clause.

  • the establishment clause.

  • the exclusionary rule.

  • procedural due process.

  • the clear and present danger test.

Explicación

Pregunta 18 de 33

1

In 2007 the Supreme Court reversed its stance on partial-birth abortion, largely due to the replacement of Sandra Day O'Connor with

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Samuel Alito.

  • Anthony Kennedy.

  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

  • William Rehnquist.

  • Antonin Scalia.

Explicación

Pregunta 19 de 33

1

The exclusionary rule states that

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • federal law cannot be applied in state courts.

  • the laws of one state court cannot be applied in the courts of another state.

  • after seven years, the statute of limitations applies, except in murder cases.

  • evidence obtained illegally is inadmissible in court.

  • state law cannot be applied in federal courts.

Explicación

Pregunta 20 de 33

1

In Mapp v. Ohio, the selective incorporation process was extended to include

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • criminal proceedings in the states.

  • civil cases.

  • pleas of insanity.

  • children (minors) accused of crime.

  • indigent litigants.

Explicación

Pregunta 21 de 33

1

In the case of McNabb v. United States, Justice Felix Frankfurter defined the "history of liberty" primarily in terms of whether

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • governments had observed procedural guarantees.

  • those convicted are actually guilty.

  • those convicted have the opportunity for appeal.

  • those convicted are treated humanely while imprisoned.

  • everyone is treated fairly in every case.

Explicación

Pregunta 22 de 33

1

Which of the following is true of the appeal process?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • The Constitution guarantees at least one appeal after conviction, but many states continue to challenge this guarantee in court.

  • Both the federal and all state constitutions guarantee an appeal after conviction.

  • The Constitution does not guarantee an appeal after conviction, but the federal government and all states permit at least one appeal.

  • There are no guarantees of appeal at the federal or state level, but the appeal process has been effectively certified through common practice.

  • The guarantee of appeal in the states was established as part of selective incorporation as applied to the Fourteenth Amendment.

Explicación

Pregunta 23 de 33

1

The Supreme Court has reasoned that a right of privacy is provided by

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

  • the Ninth Amendment, which says that people's rights are not limited to those enumerated in the Constitution.

  • the Tenth Amendment, which reserves to the people and the states those powers not granted to the federal government.

  • the implication of said right by the freedoms in the Bill of Rights.

  • the Civil Rights Act of 1991.

Explicación

Pregunta 24 de 33

1

The right to privacy was instrumental in which decision?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Roe v. Wade

  • Mapp v. Ohio

  • Schenck v. United States

  • Miranda v. Arizona

  • New York Times Co. v. United States

Explicación

Pregunta 25 de 33

1

In Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), the justices

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • ruled that states are free to adopt abortion laws of their choosing.

  • reaffirmed the essential aspects of Roe v. Wade.

  • invoked the Ninth Amendment for the first time in an abortion decision.

  • invalidated the right to an abortion in the early months of pregnancy.

  • None of these answers is correct.

Explicación

Pregunta 26 de 33

1

In Bowers v. Hardwick (1986), the Supreme Court justices determined that

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the right of privacy includes abortion in the early months of pregnancy.

  • search warrants are not needed in murder investigations.

  • freedom of speech and freedom of assembly sometimes conflict.

  • state militia members have the right to peacefully assemble.

  • the right to privacy does not include homosexual acts.

Explicación

Pregunta 27 de 33

1

What is the greatest restriction on appeals in the United States?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the refusal by state appeals court judges to grant even a first appeal

  • a federal law that bars in most instances a second federal appeal by a state prison inmate

  • the lack of any formal right of appeal in the federal process

  • a federal law that bars a first federal appeal to persons convicted of homicides

  • the very low income of some convicted persons, which reduces their ability to appeal

Explicación

Pregunta 28 de 33

1

The inevitable discovery exception

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • holds that the exclusionary rule can be waived in cases where failure to convict can lead to further public harm.

  • holds that otherwise excludable evidence can be admitted in trial if police believed they were following the proper procedures.

  • allows the use of evidence that would have been discovered regardless by other means or through other forms of evidence.

  • has effectively invalidated the exclusionary rule.

  • holds that a convicted person may not appeal the conviction when his or her own actions would have ultimately led to further unlawful acts.

Explicación

Pregunta 29 de 33

1

The Fourth Amendment protects Americans from

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • any search conducted without a warrant.

  • unreasonable searches.

  • unreasonable searches conducted only by federal officers.

  • all searches conducted by state officers.

  • searches conducted only by local officers.

Explicación

Pregunta 30 de 33

1

Voluntary school prayer in the public schools was ruled unconstitutional in

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Escobedo v. Illinois (1964).

  • Engel v. Vitale (1962).

  • Buckley v. Valeo (1976).

  • Gitlow v. New York (1925).

  • Roth v. United States (1957).

Explicación

Pregunta 31 de 33

1

Which of the following, relative to the others, is typically more protective of individual rights?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the U.S. Congress

  • the general public

  • public opinion

  • the presidency

  • the judiciary

Explicación

Pregunta 32 de 33

1

The freedoms of speech, press, assembly, and petition are found in

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • the First Amendment.

  • the Fourth Amendment.

  • the Sixth Amendment.

  • the Tenth Amendment.

  • the Fourteenth Amendment.

Explicación

Pregunta 33 de 33

1

Which of the following is true about the Sedition Act of 1798?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • The Act prohibited malicious newspaper stories about the president.

  • The Supreme Court ruled the Act unconstitutional.

  • The Senate voted it down, while the House passed it.

  • Thomas Jefferson strongly supported it.

  • The state governments refused to enforce it.

Explicación