Deck 16: Civil Rights: the Struggle for Political Equality
A) one
B) two
C) three
D) seven
E) zero
A) white primary.
B) direct primary.
C) open primary.
D) grandfather clause.
E) poll tax.
A) extended the authority of the Fourteenth Amendment to provide equality.
B) held that the Congress could only restrict discrimination by state governments.
C) held that Congress had no power to legislate civil rights.
D) upheld equal protection in hotels and theaters.
E) None of the above
A) The poll tax
B) Grandfather clauses
C) Segregation
D) The white primary
E) Desegregation
A) Slaughterhouse Cases
B) Civil Rights Cases
C) Dred Scott v. Sanford
D) Plessy v. Ferguson
E) Smith v. Allwright
A) Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857)
B) The Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)
C) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
D) Brown v. Board of Education, Topeka (1954)
E) The Civil Rights Cases (1883)
A) government regulation of corporations.
B) granting special status for majority rule.
C) removing group barriers to equal participation.
D) Congress and state legislatures.
E) protecting individuals.
A) Due process clause
B) Privileges and immunities clause
C) Equal protection clause
D) Grandfather clause
E) Full faith and credit clause
A) toll tax.
B) poll tax.
C) dole tax.
D) pole tax.
E) excise tax.
A) It immediately upheld provisions that granted equal voting rights to freed slaves.
B) It moved to support the Civil War amendments in subsequent years.
C) Its decisions actually undermined the Civil War amendments.
D) It deferred to congressional authority to legislate additional protections.
E) None of the above
A) extended equal protection under the law to all citizens.
B) guaranteed adult women the right to vote.
C) forbade the establishment of a state religion.
D) established the direct election of senators.
E) restricted the federal government from intruding on states' rights.
A) Thirteenth
B) Fourteenth
C) Fifteenth
D) Sixteenth
E) Seventeenth
A) Jim Crow segregation.
B) de facto segregation.
C) de jure segregation.
D) second generation discrimination.
E) ex post facto segregation.
A) Thirteenth
B) Fourteenth
C) Fifteenth
D) Sixteenth
E) Seventeenth
A) the right to keep and bear arms
B) freedom of speech
C) political equality
D) criminal defendants
E) the right to counsel
A) civil liberties
B) equality of opportunity
C) equal citizenship
D) universal suffrage
E) equal rights
A) Susan B. Anthony
B) Marjorie Rankin
C) Hannah Atkins
D) Elizabeth Cady Stanton
E) Betsy Ross
A) free speech.
B) women's rights.
C) voting rights.
D) abortion rights.
E) the abolitionist movement.
A) Barron v. Baltimore (1833).
B) Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge (1837).
C) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896).
D) Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857).
E) Marbury v. Madison (1803)
A) the powers of the presidency.
B) the enumerated powers of Congress.
C) equality.
D) individual rights.
E) representation in Congress.
A) the "separate but equal" doctrine was unconstitutional.
B) "separate but equal" was acceptable as long as black facilities were actually equal to white facilities.
C) cases concerning blacks and discrimination would receive "absolute" scrutiny.
D) affirmative action was justified.
E) cases concerning blacks and discrimination would receive "ordinary" scrutiny.
A) voting rights.
B) affirmative action.
C) abortion rights.
D) sexual harassment.
E) busing.
A) De facto
B) Unequal
C) Illegal
D) De jure
E) None of the above
A) gender.
B) age.
C) disabilities.
D) race.
E) sexual orientation.
A) Intermediate scrutiny
B) Suspect scrutiny
C) Strict scrutiny
D) Ordinary scrutiny
E) Lax scrutiny
A) focused exclusively on rigid quotas in hiring or admissions decisions.
B) used race as a factor in hiring or admissions decisions.
C) never used race as a factor in hiring or admissions decisions.
D) been prohibited by Congress.
E) never been upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court.
A) Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
B) The Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)
C) Minor v. Happersett (1874)
D) Civil Rights Cases (1883)
E) U.S. v. Carolene Products (1938)
A) A primary election open only to whites.
B) A primary held in the winter, usually in November.
C) A Jim Crow strategy.
D) Both A and C above
E) None of the above
B) Adarand v. Pena
C) Miller v. Johnson
D) Bakke v. California
E) Grutter v. Bollinger
A) Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
B) The Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)
C) Minor v. Happersett (1874)
D) Civil Rights Cases (1883)
E) U.S. v. Carolene Products (1938)
B) The goal of diversity in education is a compelling reason to have affirmative action.
C) The goal of remedying past discrimination in employment is a compelling reason to have affirmative action.
D) Considering race in education or employment is unconstitutional.
E) None of the above
A) Cooper v. Aaron.
B) The Slaughterhouse Cases.
C) Civil Rights Cases.
D) Brown v. Board of Education.
E) Smith v. Allwright.
A) The Civil War
B) The civil rights movement
C) The election of Richard Nixon
D) World War I
E) None of the above
A) Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
B) The Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)
C) Civil Rights Cases (1883)
D) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
E) None of the above
A) a program of private and public institutions that favor minorities and women in an attempt to compensate for past discrimination.
B) an effort to engage in racial discrimination for the greater good.
C) unconstitutional.
D) no longer needed because society is now color blind.
E) unequal treatment based on government laws and regulations.
A) Civil Rights Act of 1964.
B) Voting Rights Act of 1965.
C) American with Disabilities Act of 1967.
D) Both A and B above
E) None of the above
A) Miller v. Johnson
B) Richmond v J.A. Croson Co.
C) Adarand Constructors v. Pena
D) Regents v. Bakke
E) Grutter v. Bollinger
A) Thirteenth
B) Fourteenth
C) Fifteenth
D) Nineteenth
E) Tenth
A) upheld and allowed using race as a factor in college admissions.
B) struck down and has forbidden using race as a factor in college admissions.
C) upheld an admissions system that awarded points for race.
D) overturned the Bakke decision.
E) ruled on California's Proposition 209.
A) should be maintained as they are.
B) should be abolished.
C) do not help minorities.
D) should be used only to help women.
E) should be mended, not ended.
A) Sexual harassment affects few people in the workplace.
B) The courts judge sexual harassment cases using "intermediate scrutiny."
C) A sizable percentage of Americans say they have experienced sexual harassment at work.
D) Sexual harassment is a women's issue; very few men experience sexual harassment in the workplace.
E) None of the above
A) was struck down by the Supreme Court.
B) has not been reviewed by the Court.
C) was upheld by the Supreme Court.
D) was vetoed by President Bush.
E) None of the above
A) In the public sector, more and more women hold important elected and appointed positions in all levels of government.
B) Advances have come through changing societal attitudes about the role of women in society.
C) Advances have been made due to the increased involvement of women in politics.
D) Advances have been made through new statutes designed to equalize women's opportunities.
E) None of the above
A) Bowers v. Hardwick
B) Lawrence v. Texas
C) Dowell v. Oklahoma City
D) Bowers v. Texas
E) Romer v. Evans
A) Equal Rights Amendment
B) Seneca Falls Amendment
C) Equal Pay Amendment
D) Comparable Worth Amendment
E) Affirmative Action Amendment
A) Craig v. Boren
B) Dowell v. Oklahoma
C) United States v. Virginia
D) Roe v. Wade
E) Brennan v. Boren
A) privacy.
B) due process of law.
C) equal protection of the laws.
D) freedom of religion.
E) free speech.
B) A majority of states permit same-sex unions.
C) Nearly half of the American states have laws that ban same-sex marriage.
D) The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that same-sex unions are constitutional.
E) The U.S. Congress has ratified an amendment to ban same-sex marriage.
A) The Court has restructured civil rights for women.
B) The Supreme Court simply has not been sympathetic at all to women's issues.
C) In cases of discrimination, women are not viewed as a protected group.
D) The Court has not restructured rights for women.
E) None of the above
A) Gay and lesbian rights have been well articulated by the courts.
B) The current champion of gay and lesbian rights is Bill Clinton, who, through executive order, lifted the ban on gays in the military.
C) It is evident that the struggle over gay and lesbian rights will remain an important part of the American political agenda for a long time to come, with the eventual outcome very much in doubt.
D) The outcome of the gay rights movement will depend upon mass protests, not politics.
E) None of the above
A) All affirmative action programs are unconstitutional.
B) All affirmative action programs in education are unconstitutional.
C) Achieving diversity in college education is a compelling reason to consider race on college admissions applications.
D) Affirmative action may only be used as a temporary remedy to redraw House district lines to increase the number of minorities in Congress.
E) None of the above
A) De facto
B) Unequal
C) Illegal
D) De jure
E) None of the above
A) sexual harassment was a violation of the Equal Pay Act of 1963.
B) in order to receive damages for sexual harassment, plaintiffs had to show that the offensive actions made them unable to do their jobs or caused psychological harm.
C) sexual harassment claims had to be very narrowly tailored and that the Supreme Court was not the venue for such court decisions.
D) workers did not have to prove that offensive actions made them unable to do their jobs or caused them psychological harm, only that the work environment was hostile or abusive.
E) sexual harassment claims will only be upheld if they present a "clear and present danger" to the workforce.
A) the disabled could sue a state for money damages in federal court if the state fails to make its courts fully accessible.
B) Congress did not have the authority to pass the Americans with Disabilities Act.
C) state employees could not sue states for damages arising from violations of the Disabilities Act.
D) state employees could sue states for damages arising from violations of the Disabilities Act.
E) the disabled could not sue a state for money damages in federal court if the state fails to make its courts fully accessible.
A) Affirmative action violates the principle that people be judged as individuals.
E) People from disadvantaged groups will improve themselves only if they have experience with successful role models in important institutions.
A) Vocational Rehabilitation Act of 1973
B) Civil Rights Act of 1991
C) American with Disabilities Act of 1990
D) Civil Rights Act of 1964
E) All of the above
A) were substantially related to an important objective.
B) was limited to voting rights.
C) was not specifically mentioned.
D) All of the above
B) Title IX
C) Title XI
D) The Voting Rights Act of 1964
E) The Civil Rights Act of 1957
A) The Civil Rights Act of 1964
B) The Defense of Marriage Act
C) The Don't Ask Don't Tell Act of 1993
D) The Solomon Amendment
E) The Helms Amendment
A) affirmative action programs are likely to get a boost.
B) affirmative action programs have been narrowed considerably in their reach..
C) affirmative action programs will be studied using "intermediate" scrutiny.
D) reverse discrimination suits will probably be declared unconstitutional.
E) None of the above
A) Affirmative action violates the principle that people be judged as individuals.
E) People from disadvantaged groups will improve themselves only if they have experience with successful role models in important institutions.
A) The justifications for affirmative action put forth in the University of Michigan case will be furthered.
B) The justifications for affirmative action put forth in the University of Michigan case will not hold.
C) The new Chief Justice will seek to revise affirmative action policy by requiring medium scrutiny.
D) The new, liberal majority on the Court will seek to apply strict scrutiny to affirmative action programs.
E) None of the above

