Relier Pairs Federalism VocabularyVersion en ligne social studies government powers par Stephanie Ganser 1 Naturalization 2 Implied Power 3 To take care of the “general welfare of the people” 4 Concurrent powers 5 Express powers 6 Intrastate commerce 7 Reserved power 8 Inherent power 9 Eminent domain 10 Welfare program 11 Last Will and Testament 12 Immigration 13 zoning 14 Interstate commerce 15 Charter 16 Contract 17 Ratify An agreement between people that creates rights and duties and is enforceable by law Listed in the constitution to begin or set up a college, bank, business, etc. When a foreigner becomes a citizen after taking a citizenship test A power not specifically listed in the constitution, grows out of the very existence of being a national government, you get this power “just because” you are the government The government taking measures to do for the common good or public good in the areas of health and safety and peace Official approval A government initiative that provides financial aid for housing food and health care for people that meet specific guidelines Local rules that govern land use; typically 5 zones: residential, commercial, agricultural, recreational, industrial (sometimes mixed use zones) Business conducted within a state Powers shared by the national and state governments The right for the government to take private property for a public purpose for reasonable and fair compensation Reasonably inferred from the express power, it is a logical extension of the express power Business conducted between states A legal document that sets forth a person’s wishes as to where their assets should go upon death Coming to live permanently in a country Powers not delegated to the national government (unless denied) belong to the states; they are retained by the states; this is the 10th amendment