Relacionar Columnas Civil Liberties Vocab Part 2Versión en línea Important terms, acts, and Supreme Court cases related to civil right and liberties. por Jamie Lund 1 Cooperative federalism 2 federalism 3 Commerce Clause 4 Poll taxes 5 Dual federalism 6 Equal opportunity 7 Layer-cake federalism 8 de facto segregation 9 Equal Protection Clause 10 Barron v. Baltimore 11 Affirmative action 12 Black codes or Jim Crow Laws 13 de jure segregation determined that the Bill of Rights applied to the federal government and did not bind the state governments. a tax on voters, which prevented many Southern Blacks (and some poor whites) from voting. a clause in the Fourth Amendment on which the Supreme Court relied on its decision in Brown v. Board to strike down segregationist state laws that had been built on the foundation of the doctrine of separate but equal. segregation resulting from the fact that people of different colors live in different areas and therefore go to different schools. This metaphor implies that the powers of the central and state governments are separate but overlapping, distinguishable but overlapping-realistically speaking, a little messy. This view emphasizes the point that the responsibilities of the state governments and federal government overlap: and often share responsibilities. This is also known as marble-cake federalism. This is the idea that national and state governments are sovereign in their own distinct spheres- a view that seeks clear distinctions between the governments. segregation as a matter of law. practices that entrenched segregationist practices in state laws. a system of government that divides government responsibilities between state and federal governments. Article I, Section 2 of the constitution says that Congress has the right to regulate commerce that takes place between the states. The notion that all Americans should have an equal chance to succeed in life. Programs that seek to compensate for past discrimination by giving special attention in hiring, and in college or university admissions, to people from the groups discriminated against.