
Lecture Description
This week Craig Benzine talks about what happens when a case makes it to the Supreme Court of the United States (or the SCOTUS). We're going to focus on court procedure today. We talk about how to petition to get your case heard, how written arguments, or briefs, are made, what actually happens on the courtroom floor, and of course the variety of ways the SCOTUS issues opinions on cases.
Produced in collaboration with PBS Digital Studios: youtube.com/pbsdigitalstudios
Support is provided by Voqal: www.voqal.org
All Flickr.com images are licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 2.0
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/legalcode
Support Crash Course on Patreon: patreon.com/crashcourse
CC Kids: www.youtube.com/crashcoursekids
Course Index
- Introduction to American Government
- The Bicameral Congress
- Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances
- Federalism
- Constitutional Compromises
- Congressional Elections
- Congressional Committees
- Congressional Leadership
- How a Bill Becomes a Law
- Congressional Decisions
- Presidential Power
- Presidential Powers 2
- Congressional Delegation
- How Presidents Govern
- Bureaucracy Basics
- Types of Bureaucracies
- Controlling Bureaucracies
- Legal System Basics
- Structure of the Court System
- Supreme Court of the United States Procedures
- Judicial Review
- Judicial Decisions
- Civil Right
- Freedom of Religion
- Freedom of Speech
- Freedom of the Press
- Search and Seizure
- Due Process of Law
- Equal Protection
- Sex Discrimination
- Discrimination
- Affirmative Action
- Public Opinion
- Shaping Public Opinion
- Political Ideology
- Election Basics
- Gerrymandering
- How Voters Decide
- Political Campaigns
- Political Parties
- Party Systems
- Interest Groups
- Interest Group Formation
- Media Institution
- Media Regulation
- Market Economy
- Government Regulation
- Monetary and Fiscal Policy
- Social Policy
- Foreign Policy
Course Description
In this crash course series hosted by Craig Benzine (aka WheezyWaiter), learn the basics of American government in videos lasting about 9 minutes each, covering the basic functions and policies discussed in American politics