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Civil Liberties Part I

Quiz by Rachel Murat

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12 questions
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  • Q1
    vehicle through which the Bill of Rights are incorporated to the states

    habeas corpus

    clear and present danger test

    Gitlow v. NY

    14th amendment
    30s
  • Q2
    set the precedent of selective incorporation
    Gitlow v. NY

    Barron v. Baltimore

    Schenck v. US

    Citizens United v. FEC

    30s
  • Q3
    the Court said no to total incorporation in this case
    Barron v. Baltimore

    Gitlow v. NY

    Citizens United v FEC

    Schenck v. US

    30s
  • Q4
    the process by which, over time, SCOTUS applied the freedoms of the Bill of Rights to the states

    bad tendency test

    clear and present danger test

    total incorporation

    selective incorporation
    30s
  • Q5
    the theory that the 14th amendment's due process clause requires the states to uphold all freedoms in the Bill of Rights; rejected by the court

    selective incorporation

    clear and present danger test

    total incorporation

    bad tendency test

    30s
  • Q6
    constitutionally established guarantees that protect citizens, opinions, and property against arbitrary government interference.

    Civil rights

    selective incorporation

    Civil liberties

    total incorporation

    30s
  • Q7
    legal safeguards that prevent the government from arbitrarily depriving citizens of life, liberty, or property; guaranteed by the 5th and 14th amendments

    civil liberties

    Due process

    habeas corpus

    total incorporation

    30s
  • Q8
    An ancient right that protects an individual in custody from being held without the right to be heard in a court of law

    Civil liberties

    habeus corpus

    Due process

    Civil Rights

    30s
  • Q9
    established in Schenck v. US; the government may silence speech or expression if this is proven
    clear and present danger test

    bad tendency test

    total incorporation

    imminent lawless action test

    30s
  • Q10
    established in Gitlow v. NY; any speech that has the tendency to incite crime or disturb the public peace can be silenced; came after the clear and present danger test

    imminent lawless action test

    habeas corpus test

    clear and present danger test

    bad tendency test
    30s
  • Q11
    established in Brandenburg v. Ohio; speech is restricted only if it goes beyond mere advocacy, or words, to create a high likelihood of imminent disorder

    habeas corpus test

    clear and present danger test

    bad tendency test

    imminent lawless action test
    30s
  • Q12
    test that pushed back at the government's ability to suppress speech

    clear and present danger test

    bad tendency test

    habeas corpus test

    imminent lawless action test

    30s

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