poly sci chapter 3
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A grant-in-aid for a broadly defined policy area, whose funding amount is typically based on a formula. | Block Grants |
A grant-in-aid for a narrowly defined purpose whose dollar value is based on a formula. | Categorical formula Grants |
A grant-in-aid for a narrowly defined purpose for which governments compete with each other by proposing specific projects | Categorical project grant |
Intergovernmental relations in which the national government imposes its policy preferences on state and local governments. | Centralized federalism |
Intergovernmental relations in which the national government supports state governments’ efforts to address the domestic matters reserved to them. | Cooperative Federalism |
The constitutional clause that requires states to comply with and uphold the public acts, records, and judicial decisions of other states. | Full Faith, Credit Clause |
The state-to-state relationship created by the U.S. Constitution. | Horizontal Federalism |
The interactions of two or more governments (national, state, and local) in their collective efforts to provide goods and services to the people they each serve. | Intergovernmental Relations (IGR) |
A grant requirement that obligates the government receiving the grant to spend some of its own money to match a specified percentage of the grant money provided. | Matching funds requirement |
Definition / Question *The 1819 case that established that the necessary and proper clause justifies broad understandings of enumerated powers. | McCulloch v. Maryland |
The states’ reserved powers to protect the health, safety, lives, and properties of residents in a state. | Police Power |
The constitutionally based principle that allows a national law to supersede state or local laws. | Preemption |
The Constitution’s requirement that a state extend to other states’ citizens the privileges and immunities it provides for its citizens. | Privileges and immunities clause |