CITIZENSHIPRights, Duties, & Responsibilities
1 2 3 4 5
Immigration & Naturalization
1 2 3 4 5
Bill of Rights 1 2 3 4 5
Amendments/Rights
1 2 3 4 5
Supreme Court Cases
1 2 3 4 5
What are the (3) categories of rights?
SecurityEqualityLiberty
Voting is both of these…
RightResponsibility
What are the (5) duties of US Citizens?
Obey Laws, Pay Taxes, Attend School, Register for the Draft, Jury Duty
What are two responsibilities you have
as a US Citizen?
Be Informed, Voting, Respect Diversity, Respect
the rights of others, participate in government
Who must register for the selective service?
Men aged 18-25
What is naturalization?
The process of becoming a citizen of the United
States
What is deportation?
The process of sending illegal immigrants back to
their home country.
What is the difference between an alien & an
immigrant?
Alien – a person who comes to the US, plans on returning to their
home country.Immigrant – a person who comes to the US, plans on staying in the US.
Provide (2) situations in which a person would be
a natural born citizen.
Born in 50 statesBorn on US military baseParent(s) are a US citizen
True/FalseAliens can vote in elections.
False
The right of the government to take private property for
public use…
Eminent Domain
What are the freedoms in the 1st Amendment?
Religion, Assembly, Press, Petition, & Speech
What does the 10th Amendment protect?
Reserved Powers – Power of the States
What are the (2) clauses which apply to Freedom of Religion? Extra Point –
what do they mean?
Establishment ClauseFree Exercise Clause
What are (2) rights you have under the 6th
Amendment?
Right to an Attorney, Speedy/Fair Trial, Right to be Confronted by
Witness, Right to Grand Jury
What is suffrage, provide (2) amendments that
extend this right?
15th, 19th, 23rd, 24th, 26th Amendments
A government program designed to provide
increased opportunities to minorities.
Affirmative Action
What did the 24th Amendment outlaw?
Poll Taxes
The main portion of the 14th Amendment requires
that laws do this…
Equal Treatment of the Law
What were Jim Crow Laws?
Laws designed to separate people based on race.
Ruled that illegal evidence could not be
used in court.
Mapp v. Ohio
The court ruled that segregation laws were
unconstitutional.
Brown v Board of Education
Ruled that defendants had to be provided counsel by states in
felony cases.
Gideon v. Wainwright
Ruled that police must inform suspects of their
rights prior to questioning.
Miranda v. Arizona
The court set the principle of “reasonable suspicion”
for school searches instead of probable cause.
New Jersey v T.L.O.