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Chapter 3: Federalism

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Title: Chapter 3: Federalism


1
Chapter 3 Federalism
  • POLS 111 US Government
  • Jacob A. Helton, BA
  • for Dr. Hunter

2
But first
  • Department Website Grad Assistants
  • ICQ 6645050
  • AIM flameflash82
  • Yahoo flameflash82
  • MSN flameflash_at_mac.com
  • Skype flameflash (search for flameflash_at_mac.com)
  • GoogleTalk flameflash_at_gmail.com
  • E-mail jacob.helton_at_mnsu.edu
  • http//sbs.mnsu.edu/psle/ga/helton.html

3
Federalist LI (51)
  • Paragraph 6
  • In republican government, the legislative
    authority necessarily predominates
  • Roman Numerals
  • I 1
  • V 5
  • L 50
  • C 100
  • D 500
  • M 1000

3III 40XL 47XLVII 900CM
4
Basic Definitions
  • Federal System of Government-
  • Political authority is divided between
    self-governing parts and the central whole.
  • Federalism-
  • 267 varied definitions!
  • Constitutional arrangement whereby power is
    distributed between a central government and
    subdivisional governments. The national and
    subdivisional governments both exercise direct
    authority over individuals.

5
Types of Federalism
Dual Federalism
Layered Cake Federalism
6
Types of Federalism
Cooperative Federalism
7
Types of Federalism
Marble Cake Federalism
8
Types of Federalism
Competitive Federalism
9
Types of Federalism
Permissive Federalism
10
Types of Federalism
Our Federalism
States enjoy 10th amendment Powers.
11
Why Federalism
  • Corrects for the negatives of unitary and
    confederal systems
  • Unitary becomes too large to effectively manage
  • Confederal lacks any central authority for
    disputes
  • Allows cultural/ethical differences by region
  • ie. States choose decisions on gay marriage and
    abortion
  • Encourages experimentation
  • Programs tested in smaller environments
  • Can be replicated if successful, little harm if
    not
  • Government closer to the people

12
Powers Granted by Constitution
  • Article I, Section 8
  • Article I, Section 9
  • Article I, Section 10
  • Tenth Amendment

13
Special Points
  • Full Faith and Credit Clause
  • Interstate Privileges and Immunities
  • Extradition
  • Interstate Compacts
  • National Supremacy and Preemption
  • McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
  • Implied National Powers
  • NIMBYism

14
Loopholes
  • Grants
  • Categorical-Formula Grants
  • Project Grants
  • Block Grants
  • Mandates
  • Direct Orders
  • Cross-Cutting Requirements
  • Crossover Sanctions
  • Total and Partial Preemption

15
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