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Standing to sue
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Requirment that plaintiffs have serious interest in a case. Depends on whether they have or will sustain direct and substantial injury from a party or action of gov't.
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Class action suit
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Permits small number of people to sue on behalf of all people similarly situated.
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Justiciable dispute
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Requirement that to be heard a case must be capable of being settled as a matter of law rather than on other grounds.
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Amicus curiae brief
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Legal brief submitted by "friend of the court" to raise additional points of view and present info not in briefs of the formal parties.
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Original jurisdiction
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Courts that can hear a case first, usually in a trial. Determine facts of a case.
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Appellate jurisdiction
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Courts that hear cases appealled from lower courts. Don't review facts, only legal issues involved.
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District court
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91 federal courts of original jurisdiction. Only federal courts where trials held and juries impaneled.
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Court of appeal
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Review final decisions of district courts, except in rare cases, Also hear appeals to orders of many federal regulatory agencies.
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Supreme Court
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Peak of judiciary. Ensures uniformity in interpreting national laws, resolves conflicts among states, and maintains national supremacy in law. Has both original and appellate jurisdiction, but decides own agenda.
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Senatorial courtesy
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Unwritten tradition where nominations for state-level federal judicial posts aren't confirmed if opposed by senator of president's party from state where nominee would serve. Applies to courts of appeal.
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Solicitor general
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Presidential appointee and 3rd-rankind office in Dept. of Justice. In charge of appellate court litigation of federal gov't.
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Opinion
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Statement of legal reasoning behind a judicial decision.
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State decisis
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"Let the decision stand" in Latin. Most cases reaching appellate courts settled on this principle.
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Precedent
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How simlar cases have been decided in the past.
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Judicial implementation
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How/ whether court decisions are translated into actual policy.
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