Technically, the Constitution does not specifically provide for federal district and appellate courts in the sense that it createsthem. Article III, Section 1 of the Constitution vests the judicial power of the United States in one supreme Court and in such inferior courts as Congress may from time to time ordain and establish.
it provided the framework for popular sovereignty
Protect the rights of individuals from the federal goverment.
The states were given certain powers to create laws within their own territory. To ensure that no one group of government was too powerful the federal government had to provide for the protection of all citizens in the Union. The only way to provide these protections was to have the federal government oversee the basic laws met the rights and freedoms granted under the U.S. Constitution.
cabinet.
revenue
A federal republic
Articles
The US Constitution provides for the powers of the states in the federal system in Article 4, Sections 1 through 4 of the document. Article 10 of the Constitution allows for states to have powers not given to the federal government as well.
The US Constitution provides for the powers of the states in the federal system in Article 4, Sections 1 through 4 of the document. Article 10 of the Constitution allows for states to have powers not given to the federal government as well.
The constitution does not provide specifically for jurisdiction when a State is party to any state case. When the state is party to a case filed in FEDERAL court then that case is heard in the federal district court in that state. Every state has at least one, some have more. There are 6 federal district courts in the USA. This includes one in each territory to include DC and Puerto Rico. If the case is a state based case (filed under that state's law) then procedurally that state will hear the case.
No. That's why they wrote the constitution.
it provided the framework for popular sovereignty
Federal courts do a lot of things. They hear cases just like state courts, but operate in a different system. They are allowed to hear different kinds of cases than state courts (like if the issue is about the constitution). Also, if the parties in a case are citizens of different states (this is called "diversity") the case is started in a federal court system.
Providing education is not a federal power. That falls under a state's respective department of education. The other three are all federal powers.
Protect the rights of individuals from the federal goverment.
No they are not the same. The Articles of Confederation didn't provide the power for the government to collect taxes, for example. No, they "were" not the same* *Different author from the first paragraph.
Seperation is not water tight in the sense that:the palaimentarians are expected to make the law and not to interprete, the same appllies to the Judiciary and the executive(do according to their features as provide in the 1999 constitution).