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Saturday, September 04, 2010  
 
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Federalism

First published Sun Jan 5, 2003; substantive revision Thu Oct 12, 2006

Federalism is the theory or advocacy of federal political orders, where final authority is divided between sub-units and a center. Unlike a unitary state, sovereignty is constitutionally split between at least two territorial levels so that units at each level have final authority and can act independently of the others in some area. Citizens thus have political obligations to two authorities. The allocation of authority between the sub-unit and center may vary, typically the center has powers regarding defense and foreign policy, but sub-units may also have international roles. The sub-units may also participate in central decision-making bodies. Much recent philosophical attention is spurred by renewed political interest in federalism, coupled with empirical findings concerning the requisite and legitimate basis for stability and trust among citizens in federations. Philosophical contributions have addressed the dilemmas and opportunities facing Canada, Australia and Europe, to mention just a few areas where federal arrangements

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 Types and Methods of Governments Minimize

Models of Intergovernmental Relations (Wright, 1988, Hamilton & Wells, 1990)
In a dual, or coordinate system, the separate levels of government have distinct, autonomous spheres of authority.
Compound systems include overlapping, interdependent governments and are characterized by bargaining. They may be cooperative or competitive.
In unitary, centralized or national systems, states are subordinate to the national government and the relationship is hierarchical.

More Divisions of Power (Diamond, 1974)
Confederal : states retain sovereign power, national government is dependent on their will.
Federal: states retain powers within a certain sphere and national government has power in a different sphere
Unitary or national government retains all power, with states dependent on its will.
Evolving Divisions of Power (Walker, 1995)
Dual Federalism of the Rural Republic (1789-1861)
enumerated powers, sovereign and equal spheres
Dual Federalism Serving Commerce (1861-1930): "to perfect the free economy". 
Growing government at both levels, with states as senior partners in police powers and providing services, federal government in regulating commerce.
Cooperative Federalism (1930-1960): Shared functions, focus on providing services, broadly collaborative patterns.
CreativeFederalism, Picket-Fence Federalism (1960-1980): 
Overloaded cooperation, intergovernmental fiscal transfers, crosscutting regulation and states as implementers of federal mandates, devolutionary revenue sharing.
Cooptive Federalism and the Reaction (1981-) Devolution, deregulation, proposed swaps, supply-side reductions, deficit dominates.
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