Does Local Dependence on Grants Lead to Support for National Incumbents?
Marcelo Castro and Tiago Cisalpino consider whether local dependence on upper-government grants in Brazil leads to more political support for incumbent leaders. Read more…
Marcelo Castro and Tiago Cisalpino consider whether local dependence on upper-government grants in Brazil leads to more political support for incumbent leaders. Read more…
Jensen Lillquist explores the extraterritorial issues raised by last summer's U.S. Supreme Court abortion ruling, Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization. Read more here.
In two papers published by the Center for Policy Research, a group of scholars analyze a number of federalism issues in India. Read more…
Ray Nothstine suggests that a clearer view of the "state of the union" can be found by examining state-level policies rather than those emanating…
A group of scholars explore how federal political entities affect the ability to align social and public health policy in pandemic responses. Read more here.
Jean Leclair offers commentary on Stephen Tierney's book, The Federal Contract: A Constitutional Theory of Federalism. Read more here.
Philip Rocco analyzes the sources of variation in state and local investment in the 2020 census and why those variances occurred. Read more here.
Evan Matthew Gelobter considers whether Missouri's "Second Amendment Preservation Act" aligns with the system of government intended by the Framers of the U.S. Constitution. Read…
The Congressional Research Service has recently updated a report on federalism-based limitations on congressional power. Read more here.
Julio Homem de Siqueira traces the history of the Brazilian state and contends that the nation "was never truly federalist, but unitarian." Read more…
Steven G. Bradbury contends that California's requirement that all new cars in the state must be powered by electricity by 2035 "is the antithesis…
Gina Starblanket explores the relationship between the Canadian Constitution, treaties with indigenous peoples, and provincial authority in regard to the sale of indigenous lands.…
CSF Fellows John Kincaid and J. Wesley Leckrone have edited Teaching Federalism: Multidimensional Approaches (Northampton, Massachusetts: Edward Elgar, 2023). The book, part of the publisher's "Elgar Guides…
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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.