We make much of Our Federalism. \u27 The Supreme Court routinely crafts doctrine to further its ends, and paeans to federalism regularly appear in law reviews. Federalism is a system that permits minorities to rule, and we are intimately familiar with its benefits: federalism promotes choice, competition, participation, experimentation, and the diffusion of power. The Court reels these arguments off as easily as do scholars
Justice O’Connor rightly called federalism “our oldest question of constitutional law.”1 But the con...
Part I of this Note offers a brief account of the two main theories of federalism protection: the po...
Many commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s New Federalism decisions as excessively fo...
To determine whether federalism executes multi-level governance to realize democracy, we examine con...
American constitutional federalism emerged from a complex matrix comprised by multiple intellectual,...
Changes in federalism that adjust the very foundation of our intergovernmental system certainly meri...
Book Chapter Barry Cushman, Federalism, in The Cambridge Companion to the United States Constitution...
It\u27s necessary to begin with considering the sort of judicially enforced federalism rejected in G...
The conventional wisdom is that the Rehnquist Court has a federalism agenda-restricting the scope of...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
For some time now, a narrow but persistent majority of the Supreme Court has undertaken the project ...
The Constitution does not use the words federal or federalism. It gives Congress a set of powers and...
This paper starts from the proposition that although the Rehnquist Court imposed limits on federal p...
of federalism and the federal courts. ABSTRACT: This article considers some of the Supreme Court’s r...
This article broadly examines the conservative Rehnquist Court\u27s federalism doctrines and, in doi...
Justice O’Connor rightly called federalism “our oldest question of constitutional law.”1 But the con...
Part I of this Note offers a brief account of the two main theories of federalism protection: the po...
Many commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s New Federalism decisions as excessively fo...
To determine whether federalism executes multi-level governance to realize democracy, we examine con...
American constitutional federalism emerged from a complex matrix comprised by multiple intellectual,...
Changes in federalism that adjust the very foundation of our intergovernmental system certainly meri...
Book Chapter Barry Cushman, Federalism, in The Cambridge Companion to the United States Constitution...
It\u27s necessary to begin with considering the sort of judicially enforced federalism rejected in G...
The conventional wisdom is that the Rehnquist Court has a federalism agenda-restricting the scope of...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
For some time now, a narrow but persistent majority of the Supreme Court has undertaken the project ...
The Constitution does not use the words federal or federalism. It gives Congress a set of powers and...
This paper starts from the proposition that although the Rehnquist Court imposed limits on federal p...
of federalism and the federal courts. ABSTRACT: This article considers some of the Supreme Court’s r...
This article broadly examines the conservative Rehnquist Court\u27s federalism doctrines and, in doi...
Justice O’Connor rightly called federalism “our oldest question of constitutional law.”1 But the con...
Part I of this Note offers a brief account of the two main theories of federalism protection: the po...
Many commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s New Federalism decisions as excessively fo...