Understanding the U.S.A.
- Translation:
- 中文
Government
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
The United States is a federal union of 50 states, with the District of Columbia as the seat of the federal government. The Constitution outlines the structure of the national government and specifies its powers and activities, and defines the relationship between the national government and individual state governments. Power is shared between the national and state (local) governments. Within each state are counties, townships, cities and villages, each of which has its own elective government.
Governmental power and functions in the United States rest in three branches of government: the legislative, judicial, and executive. Article 1 of the Constitution defines the legislative branch and vests power to legislate in the Congress of the United States. The executive powers of the President are defined in Article 2. Article 3 places judicial power in the hands of one Supreme Court and inferior courts as Congress sees necessary to establish. In this system of a "separation of powers" each branch operates independently of the others, however, there are built in "checks and balances" to prevent a concentration of power in any one branch and to protect the rights and liberties of citizens. For example, the President can veto bills approved by Congress and the President nominates individuals to serve in the Federal judiciary; the Supreme Court can declare a law enacted by Congress or an action by the President unconstitutional; and Congress can impeach the President and Federal court justices and judges.
Online Reading
American National Government: An Overview (CRS Report, updated May 20, 2003) (PDF file, 38.1kB)
Learn About the United States: Quick Civics Lessons (U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services) (PDF file, 1.21MB)
Our American Government (U.S. Congress) (PDF file, 349kB)
Outline of U.S. Government (published by Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State, Sept 2000) (PDF file, 469kB)
U.S. Government Manual (official handbook of the U.S. Federal Government)
Internet Links
-
Government Overview
- Ben’s Guide to U.S. Government for Kids (U.S. Government Printing Office)
- Columbia University Libraries: U.S. Government Documents
- A Chronology of U.S. Historical Documents (The University of Oklahoma College of Law)
- E-Gov (The White House)
- Government Web Resources (U.S. Library of Congress)
- GovSpot.com
- USA.gov (U.S. government's official web portal)
Statistics
- FedStats (the gateway to statistics from over 100 U.S. Federal agencies)
Government Search
- Federal Citizen Information Center: National Contact Center
- GPO Access (provides free electronic access to a wealth of important information products produced by the Federal Government)
- Google U.S. Government Search (a search engine that limits its searching to .gov and .mil websites)
- Infomine: Government Information (a search engine developed by university librarians)
Adobe Reader
-
Download Free
All downloadable documents on this page are provided in PDF format. To view PDFs you must have a copy of Adobe Acrobat Reader. You may download a free version by clicking the link above.


