Covid-19 and Political Polarization in the United States
CSF Fellows John Kincaid and J. Wesley Leckrone write that the most important feature of the U.S. response to the Covid-19 pandemic has been…
CSF Fellows John Kincaid and J. Wesley Leckrone write that the most important feature of the U.S. response to the Covid-19 pandemic has been…
A group of authors explore India's asymmetric federalism, particularly in the case of the 2019 Jammu and Kashmir Reorganization Act. Read more here.
A federal district court has blocked the implementation of the Centers for Disease Control's vaccine mandate for healthcare workers in facilities in ten states…
Bill Lucia reports the results of a survey indicating that 80 percent of responding mayors say that homelessness, transportation infrastructure, and social spending programs…
Joan Costa-Font and Ada Ferrer-i-Carbonell examine how devolution in Spain has affected choice in public versus private healthcare. Read more here.
Emily Chertoff explores the outer limits of states' abilities to regulate noncitizens. Read more here.
A group of scholars have edited The Principle of Equality in Diverse States: Reconciling Autonomy with Equal Rights and Opportunities (Leiden, Netherlands: Brill, 2021). The book looks…
Pending litigation in federal court has left 26 states in limbo regarding whether they will be required to follow the Occupational Safety and Health…
The "Build Back Better" bill that passed the U.S. House last Friday would, if it passes the Senate, include hundreds of billions of dollars…
Clay S. Jenkinson has interviewed Jeffrey Sutton, a federal judge and author of Who Decides: States as Laboratories of Constitutional Experimentation. Sutton contends that a…
Dear Ambassador Fitsum Arega: The Center for the Study of Federalism expresses its very deepest alarm about the recent arrest of Prof. Assefa…
Michael Pal examines the constitutional politics of electoral governance in federations by focusing on the role of election commissions in Asian nations. Read more…
A group of writers explore how states and localities can enforce civil rights even in the absence of federal civil-rights enforcement. 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.
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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.