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Chapter 7

The document provides a summary of a student's assignment on chapter 7 of their AP Government textbook. The assignment covers key vocabulary, a description of how the federal bureaucracy is organized and carries out functions of government, how the bureaucracy uses its authority to create and implement regulations, its role in the policymaking process, and how Congress, the President, and courts provide oversight of the bureaucracy.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views

Chapter 7

The document provides a summary of a student's assignment on chapter 7 of their AP Government textbook. The assignment covers key vocabulary, a description of how the federal bureaucracy is organized and carries out functions of government, how the bureaucracy uses its authority to create and implement regulations, its role in the policymaking process, and how Congress, the President, and courts provide oversight of the bureaucracy.

Uploaded by

conorfrizelle4
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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AP Government Name:

Murphy Date Completed:

Assignment: Chapter 7 – The Federal Bureaucracy

Vocabulary/Definitions: AP Government is a vocabulary-heavy class. As such, you are expected to have working
definitions – preferably in your own words - of all of the words listed for each chapter.

Vocabulary: Your Definition


Federal bureaucracy The agencies created by the president under the executive branch that carry out the
laws of the nation
Bureaucrat A person employed by one of the bureaucracies
Political patronage The fulfillment of positions based on support over merit
Pendleton Act Aka the civil service reform act of 1883, it created rules around the filling of
government jobs in the bureaucracies
Federal civil service A merit-based bureaucracy, not including the armed forces or political appointments
Merit system The opposite of patronage, where politicians will fill the bureaucracy with people that
deserve to be there rather than loyalty to a party
Iron triangle Name of activities that take place between the bureaucracy, congress, and interest
groups to achieve policy goals
Issue Network Webs of influence between policymakers, interest groups, and policy advocates
Implementation The bureaucracy’s role in putting laws into action
Bureaucratic Discretion The power to decide what a law means in real life and how to enforce it
Regulation The process where the federal government will make rules that are like laws, to carry
out the laws of congress
Bureaucratic adjudication When the federal government settles disputes between parties that arise from the
implementation process

Using the Content: Write a response to the prompts for each section of the reading. Each of the following is written in
the style of an AP prompt, and – when responded to appropriately – will require you to utilize the content of the
associated section. Make sure to correctly use the vocabulary and content from the book in your responses.

Section 7.1:

1) Describe how the bureaucracy is organized, and explain how it carries out the functions of the American
government.
The bureaucracy is organized in a way where it is a part of the executive branch. This means that they have no
power to actually create the laws, rather the bureaucracy can just enforce laws. The way it is organized differs per
era that the textbook talks about, but generally the president appoints all of bureaucrats to their respective
bureaucracies. This could be done by patronage, meaning that a person in a position didn’t need to be qualified to
be there, just loyal to the president. However, the Pendleton act made rules about this, as it seemed to be
corrupt. Bureaucracies carry out the function of the American government in a way similar to what was
mentioned before. They could not create laws, just enforce them.

Section 7.2:

2) Explain how the federal bureaucracy uses its authority to create and implement/enforce regulations.
The authority of the bureaucracy grew exponentially over time, and its ability to create and implement regulations
grew with it. The way in which the federal bureaucracy enforces regulations is through regulations. These
processes are just rules that the government makes along with laws that basically act as laws but aren’t actually
laws. Basically, the power of bureaucratic discretion means that they bureaucracy can do whatever they need to in
order to carry out laws, and regulations are a part of that power. As long as it is necessary, then the bureaucracy
can add something to a law that isn’t official, but it acts like it is. It is just a step that allows laws to be practical
and not purely hypothetical.

Section 7.3:

3) Explain the role of the federal bureaucracy in the policymaking process.


The federal bureaucracy has a minor role in the policymaking process of the US Government. Instead of creating
the policies, they just enforce them. However, the bureaucracy can provide feedback, revision suggestions, and
termination in their part of the process. This means that the bureaucrats that run the bureaucracies have some
discretion over the laws that they enforce and how they enforce them. As stated in the previous response, the use
of regulation is how they help in that regard. However, the bureaucracy also has the power to settle disputes that
come up in the policymaking process. (Known as bureaucratic adjudication.)

Section 7.4:

4) Explain how Congress, the President and the courts can check the bureaucracy (hold them accountable).
The president, congress, the president, and the courts can all check the bureaucracy in different ways, but they all
hold some power over it. The president can check the bureaucracy in many different ways, as he is basically the
head of it. He can sign executive orders, appointing the bureaucrats, and the submission of budgets to congress.
Congress passes the laws that the bureaucrats have to enforce and also adjudicate funding to the programs.
Finally, SCOTUS can restrict bureaucratic action if they find the actions to be too unconstitutional.

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