Should Canadian Federal Health Transfers Be Based on Incentives?
Livio Di Matteo contends that federal health transfers to provinces should be based on incentives-based federalism. Read more here.
Livio Di Matteo contends that federal health transfers to provinces should be based on incentives-based federalism. Read more here.
The Torys law firm will present a webinar titled, "Canadian Federalism and the Energy Transition" on November 30. Read more here.
A group of scholars examine party ties and transfer receipts in contending that "federalism inherently entails restrictions for misusing intergovernmental transfers for political reasons." Read…
As part of its Contemporary Issues in Canadian Federalism series, the Canadian government has announced an online event titled, "Economic Development and Infrastructure" to…
Aslı Ü. Bâli and Omar M. Dajani have edited Federalism and Decentralization in the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022).…
As part of the Organization for Economic Cooperation's working papers series on fiscal federalism, Pietrangelo de Biase and Sean Dougherty analyze subnational fiscal rules.…
Democracy Without Borders has announced Global Democracy: The Key to Global Justice by Oded Gilad and Dena Freeman. The book includes discussions of the role…
Nishan Khatiwada explores whether Nepal needs provinces. Read more here.
Tanzim Rashid writes that recent laws passed by the provinces of Alberta and Quebec have "reignited old, unsettled frictions" about the proper division of…
The Athens Institute for Education and Research has issued a call for papers for its annual conference. The session at which papers will be presented…
Rotimi Suberu reviews how power in Nigeria has, over time, become more centralized. This article is part of a special issue of Regional and Federal…
Brad Riley describes how intergovernmental coalitions can benefit from parametric insurance -- that is, a non-traditional insurance policy that pays out on the occurrence…
Jesse Hartery considers the constitutionality of the proposed Alberta Sovereignty Act. 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.
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