Latest articles
-
Ballot Initiatives and Direct Democracy: How Citizens Write Laws
In more than half of U.S. states, citizens can gather signatures, place proposed laws or constitutional amendments directly on the ballot, and enact them by popular vote — bypassing the legislature entirely. This explainer covers how the initiative process works, the different types of ballot measures, and the arguments that have surrounded direct democracy since the Progressive Era.
-
Jury Duty Explained: Why Citizens Serve and How Trials Actually Work
Jury duty puts ordinary citizens at the center of the justice system. This explainer covers the difference between grand and trial juries, how voir dire and peremptory challenges work, what jurors actually decide, and why the constitutional right to a jury trial is designed as a check on government power.
-
How the Constitution Is Amended: The Article V Process Explained
The U.S. Constitution has been formally amended only 27 times in more than two centuries. Article V creates a demanding two-stage process requiring supermajority agreement across multiple levels of government. This explainer covers both proposal pathways, the ratification threshold, and the history of amendments from the Bill of Rights through the modern era.
-
Checks and Balances: How Each Branch of Government Limits the Others
Separating government into three branches is only half the design. The other half gives each branch specific tools to restrain the others — the veto, judicial review, congressional oversight, and more. This explainer covers how those mechanisms work and why the system is built to make power deliberately difficult to exercise.
-
How Trade Policy Is Made: Tariffs, Treaties, and the Congress-President Relationship
The Constitution assigns trade authority to Congress, but presidents impose tariffs by executive action, negotiate agreements that reshape entire industries, and use statutory delegations from decades ago that Congress has not reclaimed. This explainer covers how that arrangement developed, what fast track authority is, how the WTO fits in, and why the distributional consequences of trade policy turned it from bipartisan consensus into one of the most contested areas of economic policy.
-
Public Defenders and the Right to Counsel: How the Sixth Amendment Works in Practice
Gideon v. Wainwright established in 1963 that states must provide lawyers to defendants who cannot afford them. Six decades later, chronic underfunding, crushing caseloads, and an ineffective constitutional standard for challenging deficient representation mean the gap between the promise and the practice remains one of the most documented failures in the American justice system.
-
The Administrative State Explained: Agencies, Rulemaking, and Democratic Control
Federal agencies issue thousands of rules each year that carry the force of law, yet most Americans have little sense of how the rulemaking process works or who controls it. This explainer covers the notice-and-comment process, judicial review, the recent end of Chevron deference, and the enduring debate over whether delegating lawmaking to unelected bureaucrats is compatible with democratic self-government.
-
How Municipal Debt Works: Bonds, Budgets, and Local Government Finance
Cities and counties borrow billions through the municipal bond market to fund the infrastructure communities depend on. This explainer covers the difference between general obligation and revenue bonds, the tax treatment that makes munis attractive, the hidden debt of pension obligations, and what happens when a local government cannot pay.
-
Civil Asset Forfeiture Explained: Property, Due Process, and Police Revenue
Civil asset forfeiture allows the government to seize property connected to suspected crime without a criminal conviction — in many states without charging the owner at all. This explainer covers how the practice works, the equitable sharing program that lets agencies keep seized assets, and why reform has been uneven despite broad political agreement that the current system has serious problems.
-
The Role of the Federal Reserve: Monetary Policy and Democratic Accountability
The Federal Reserve sets interest rates and regulates major banks without being subject to electoral cycles. This explainer covers the Fed's hybrid structure, its dual mandate of maximum employment and stable prices, the tools it uses beyond interest rates, and the persistent debate over how much insulation from politics a central bank should have.
-
How Executive Orders Work: Presidential Power Without Congress
Executive orders let presidents direct the federal government without passing legislation, but they operate within real legal limits and can be reversed by the next administration on day one. This explainer covers where the authority comes from, what orders can and cannot do, and why the most consequential policy still requires legislation.
-
How Redistricting Works: Drawing Districts, Gerrymandering, and Political Power
Every ten years, legislative district boundaries are redrawn in ways that can shift political power without a single vote being cast. This explainer covers who draws the maps, the legal constraints from the Voting Rights Act and equal population requirements, and why the Supreme Court declined to police partisan gerrymandering.
-
How Government Handles Public Health Crises: Authority, Coordination, and Limits
Public health emergencies reveal the structure of government authority in stark ways. Primary authority rests with states, not the federal government. This explainer covers state police power, the roles of CDC and FEMA, vaccine authorization, and constitutional constraints on emergency measures.
-
Environmental Regulation Explained: How Government Protects Air, Water, and Land
Environmental regulation is carried out through a layered system of federal statutes, state programs, and permit requirements. This explainer covers the EPA, the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts, the federal-state relationship, and how climate regulation became the most contested question in contemporary environmental law.
-
The Free Market in Public Life: What Markets Do Well and Where They Fall Short
Markets are powerful tools for allocating resources, but they work better in some contexts than others. Understanding market failures — externalities, public goods, information asymmetries — and when government intervention is justified is central to making sense of policy debates.
-
Campaign Finance Explained: Money, Elections, and the Law
Citizens United transformed what corporations, unions, and individuals can spend on elections. This explainer covers hard money limits, super PACs, dark money through 501(c)(4) organizations, and what research actually says about the relationship between campaign spending and political influence.
-
How Social Safety Nets Work: Programs, Eligibility, and the Policy Debates
The social safety net is not a single program but a collection of overlapping federal and state programs. This explainer covers Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, SNAP, unemployment insurance, and the recurring policy debates about work requirements and block grants.
-
Public Education and Government: Who Controls American Schools
Public education is governed by more than thirteen thousand local school districts, fifty state governments, and a federal department with limited formal authority. Understanding who holds what power is the starting point for making sense of curriculum debates, funding inequities, and school choice policy.
-
Understanding the Supreme Court: Power, Precedent, and Political Reality
The Supreme Court holds the final word on constitutional questions, but its power depends on institutional compliance and comes with real limits. Here is how the docket works, what judicial review means, and why appointments have become such high-stakes politics.
-
How Immigration Policy Works: Law, Enforcement, and the Political Divide
Immigration policy involves overlapping federal agencies, a backlogged court system, and legal categories that most political coverage glosses over. This explainer covers visa categories, the distinction between civil and criminal violations, asylum law, and the limits of executive discretion.
-
Voting Rights in America: A History of Expansion and Restriction
The right to vote in the United States has been expanded and restricted repeatedly over two centuries. Poll taxes, literacy tests, the Voting Rights Act, and Shelby County v. Holder are all part of a story that is essential background to current debates about election law.
-
How the Criminal Justice System Works: From Arrest to Sentencing
Most criminal cases never go to trial. Understanding how cases actually move from arrest through charging, bail, plea bargaining, and sentencing — and where discretion is exercised — is essential for making sense of debates about reform.
-
How the Census Shapes Government: Population Counts, Redistricting, and Federal Funding
The decennial census determines congressional seats, shapes political maps through redistricting, and drives the distribution of over a trillion dollars in federal funding each year. Understanding how it works explains why the count itself is so politically contested.
-
How Lobbying Works: Interest Groups, Influence, and the Law
Lobbying is legal, constitutionally protected, and practiced by a wide range of organizations — not only corporations. This explainer covers what lobbyists actually do, how the disclosure system works, and what research says about their real influence on policy.
-
Civil Disobedience and Protest Rights: What the Law Says and What History Shows
Protest is legally protected, and civil disobedience has a long history as a tool of democratic change. This explainer covers what rights protesters have, where those rights end, and what the historical record shows about when nonviolent direct action produces results.
-
Freedom of Information Laws Explained: How the Public Gets Government Records
Freedom of information laws give citizens, journalists, and researchers the right to request government documents. Here is how those laws work, what agencies can withhold, how to file a request, and where the system falls short.
-
What Is Eminent Domain? Government Property Power Explained
Governments can compel the sale of private property for public use, but the power has limits and a contested history. Understanding its scope, its legal constraints, and the debates it generates is essential context for land-use and infrastructure discussions.
-
The Basics of Public Policy: How Governments Decide What to Do
Public policy is the collective name for the decisions governments make and the actions they take. Understanding the policy cycle — from problem identification to evaluation — helps demystify political decision-making.
-
Media Literacy and Spotting Bias: A Practical Guide
Every news source makes choices about what to cover and how to frame it. Recognising those choices is a skill that can be learned, and it makes you a more effective reader of public information.
-
Understanding Federalism: How Power Is Divided Between Levels of Government
In federal systems, power is distributed between a national government and regional governments rather than concentrated in one place. Here is why that matters and how it works in practice.
-
The Role of NGOs in Society: What Non-Governmental Organisations Actually Do
Non-governmental organisations operate in the space between governments and markets. They advocate, deliver services, monitor power, and build civil society in ways that neither sector can easily replicate.
-
How Taxes Fund Public Services: The Basics of Government Revenue
Taxes are the mechanism through which societies pool resources for shared purposes. Understanding where government money comes from helps make sense of budget debates and public spending decisions.
-
Freedom of the Press Explained: Why It Exists and How It Works
Press freedom is one of the most contested principles in democratic life. What does it actually protect, what are its legal limits, and why do democracies treat it as foundational?
-
Understanding the Judicial Branch: Courts, Judges, and the Rule of Law
Courts do more than resolve disputes. They interpret legislation, review executive action, and define the limits of government power. Here is how the judicial system is structured and what it does.
-
How Public Opinion Polling Works — and Where It Falls Short
Opinion polls shape how journalists and politicians talk about public sentiment, but polls vary widely in quality and methodology. Understanding how they work helps you read them more critically.
-
Civic Participation: Beyond Voting
Voting is the most visible form of civic participation, but democratic engagement includes attending public meetings, contacting representatives, jury service, and much more.
-
The Role of Local Government: What Your City or County Actually Controls
Most people interact with local government more often than any other level, yet it receives the least attention. Here is what local government does, how it is structured, and why it matters.
-
Understanding the Electoral System: How Votes Become Representation
Different democracies translate votes into seats in very different ways. Plurality voting, proportional representation, and ranked-choice systems each produce different kinds of outcomes.
-
What Separation of Powers Actually Means
Dividing government into legislative, executive, and judicial branches was a deliberate design choice, not an accident of history. This is the reasoning behind it and how it functions in practice.
-
How a Bill Becomes Law: The Legislative Process Explained
From a member's first draft to the president's signature, passing a law involves multiple chambers, committees, votes, and opportunities for the process to stall. Here is how it actually works.