Federalism and Perceptions of Canadian Healthcare
Olivier Jacques and Marion Perrot report on survey results concerning the state of Canadian healthcare. The writers suggest that the results reveal that "perceptions of the…
Olivier Jacques and Marion Perrot report on survey results concerning the state of Canadian healthcare. The writers suggest that the results reveal that "perceptions of the…
Donald F. Kettl writes that "we've flipped the script" from the Nixon administration's top-down devolution of power from the federal government to states and localities.…
Ilan Wurman contends that the commonly held understanding that the Fourteenth Amendment's Privileges and Immunities Clause incorporates the Bill of Rights against the states…
Jared Brey reviews the ways that localities can use federal infrastructure funds to improve street safety. Read more here.
Adam M. Steinman reviews two law review articles, including "New Federalism and Civil Rights Enforcement" (116 Nw. U. L. Rev. 737 (2021)), in which the authors recommend that civil rights advocates…
Vianney Sebayiga explores how types of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms could help resolve intergovernmental disputes in Kenya. Read more here.
Merijn Chamon and Nathan de Arriba-Sellier consider the recent FBF ruling of the European Union Court of Justice, in which a French bank, Fédération Bancaire Française,…
Alan Fenna, Sébastien Jodoin, and Joana Setzer have edited Climate Governance and Federalism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023). The book explores whether federations tend to help…
A group of scholars have written Putting Federalism in Its Place: The Territorial Politics of Social Policy Revisited (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2023). The…
On May 3, the New York City Bar Association will host a webinar titled, "New Frontiers in Federalism - Session 1: The Changing Tides of…
Orly Mazur and Adam B. Thimmesch write that the digital economy is changing faster than the law can respond, leading to particular challenges in…
Gregory Ablavsky criticizes the U.S. Supreme Court's recent Castro-Huerta v. Oklahoma decision and writes that the voluminous body of Indian law makes it difficult for Supreme Court…
L. Joe Dunman traces the history of the federal Americans with Disabilities Act and the many similar state statutes that followed in the wake…
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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.
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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.