This essay offers a new defense of judicial review of the Constitution\u27s federal structure. It begins by showing that federalism is best understood not as a system that creates rights for states but one that provides benefits for the citizens of the nation. It achieves this goal by distributing powers best exercised at the national level to the federal government and those best exercised more locally to the states. The benefits of this distribution include catering to diverse preferences of citizens in different states and creating horizontal competition among the states for efficient provision of government services. Because these benefits flow to citizens rather than to government officials, the structure of federalism creates a clas...
It\u27s necessary to begin with considering the sort of judicially enforced federalism rejected in G...
This inquiry argues that current Tenth Amendment jurisprudence causes net harm to federalism values ...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court frequently has invoked federalism principles when r...
Extant legal scholarship often portrays citizens as the catalysts of federalization. Scholars say th...
This Comment argues the federal system must be preserved and the Supreme Court should build upon the...
The thesis of this Article is that proportionality of punishment has become a casualty of federaliza...
States frequently administer federal law, yet scholars have largely overlooked how the practice of c...
This article applies the method of text and principle to an important problem in constitutional inte...
Enforcing federalism is most commonly thought to involve the search for aconstitutional delegation o...
Part I of this Note offers a brief account of the two main theories of federalism protection: the po...
Federalism has moved to the forefront of constitutional analysis in recent years as a narrow majorit...
In the American constitutional tradition, federalism is commonly understood as a mechanism designed ...
To what extent should federal prosecutors be regulated by states, by federal courts, or by the U.S. ...
Like the Supreme Court\u27s separation of powers jurisprudence, its federalism jurisprudence might, ...
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part I provides background on the historical development of con...
It\u27s necessary to begin with considering the sort of judicially enforced federalism rejected in G...
This inquiry argues that current Tenth Amendment jurisprudence causes net harm to federalism values ...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court frequently has invoked federalism principles when r...
Extant legal scholarship often portrays citizens as the catalysts of federalization. Scholars say th...
This Comment argues the federal system must be preserved and the Supreme Court should build upon the...
The thesis of this Article is that proportionality of punishment has become a casualty of federaliza...
States frequently administer federal law, yet scholars have largely overlooked how the practice of c...
This article applies the method of text and principle to an important problem in constitutional inte...
Enforcing federalism is most commonly thought to involve the search for aconstitutional delegation o...
Part I of this Note offers a brief account of the two main theories of federalism protection: the po...
Federalism has moved to the forefront of constitutional analysis in recent years as a narrow majorit...
In the American constitutional tradition, federalism is commonly understood as a mechanism designed ...
To what extent should federal prosecutors be regulated by states, by federal courts, or by the U.S. ...
Like the Supreme Court\u27s separation of powers jurisprudence, its federalism jurisprudence might, ...
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part I provides background on the historical development of con...
It\u27s necessary to begin with considering the sort of judicially enforced federalism rejected in G...
This inquiry argues that current Tenth Amendment jurisprudence causes net harm to federalism values ...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court frequently has invoked federalism principles when r...