Podcast on Federal and State Cannabis Laws
Robert Mikos of Vanderbilt Law School was interviewed on a recent podcast about the intersection of federal and state cannabis laws. You can listen…
Robert Mikos of Vanderbilt Law School was interviewed on a recent podcast about the intersection of federal and state cannabis laws. You can listen…
The U.S. Justice Department has announced that it will play a greater role in assisting state and tribal law-enforcement authorities in murder cases. Read…
Geoffrey Hale writes that since the 1980s, Canada has employed a "soft, asymmetrical federalism" in which the national government negotiates terms of cooperation with the…
The Trump administration is proposing a rule change to the Interior Department's Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement designed to bolster the role of…
The Federalist Society recently hosted a panel on sanctuary jurisdictions. You can view the panel discussion here.
Marcelo Castro and Tiago Cisalpino examine whether the economic dependence of small towns on federal grants leads to electoral support. Read more here.
Carmen Belén Guillén Pérez explores the complex relationship between the central government and the Spanish Autonomous Communities. Read more here.
David S. Rubenstein writes that private entities have long contracted with the federal government, but that today such private entities implement major federal programs…
Sean Speer suggests that Canada should emulate the Opportunity Zone program created by the 2017 U.S. tax law. Speer contends that the zones would…
A bill filed in the U.S. House of Representatives would offer federal financial help to states and localities that enact changes to their criminal-justice…
Dale Eisler and Johnson Shoyama write that the sense of western alienation evidenced in the recent election should not be a surprise. Read more here.
The Trump administration's shifting of transportation funds to states toward road construction has drawn criticism from supporters of alternative transportation projects. Read more here.
James Dunne offers a look back at when, he suggests, Britain was at the forefront of the European federalism movement. Read more here.
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The Center for the Study of Federalism (CSF) is a nonpartisan, interdisciplinary research and education institution dedicated to supporting and advancing scholarship and public understanding of federal theories, principles, institutions, and processes as practical means of organizing power in free societies.
All of the CSF Fellows hold advanced degrees, are affiliated with academic institutions, and are scholarly experts in their fields. For more on each Fellow see CSF Fellows.
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Federalism is American government’s best kept secret. Its influence is pervasive and profound. Though not mentioned in the Constitution, federalism’s meaning and application have been at the center of disputes from 1776 to the Civil War to our current culture wars. We are scholars who focus on federalism, and through this podcast, we explore how federalism, from practice to theory, shapes our politics, policies, culture, society, and daily life.
Federalism’s influence on American government, culture and society is pervasive and profound, yet often unexplored. This short podcast examines single, practical topics to show how federalism’s influence is real and relevant in average citizens’ daily lives.