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Home >  Books >  Real Federalism
Real Federalism
Print Mail
Why It Matters, How It Could Happen
By Michael S. Greve
Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000
Real Federalism
Dimensions: 6.25'' x 9.25''
180 pages
AEI Press  (Washington)
Publication Date: March 1999
Paperback
ISBN: 0844741000
Price: $ 16.95
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Hardcover
ISBN: 0844740993
Price: $ 34.95
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Examination Copies

"Real" federalism, Michael S. Greve argues, is a federalism that promotes citizen choice and competition among the states. Far from being an anachronism in an increasingly complex society, a regime that permits citizens to choose among competing jurisdictions, each offering a different mixture of government services, is uniquely suited to a country of highly mobile and increasingly sophisticated citizen-consumers.

Real federalism requires effective constitutional constraints on the national government. American government lost such constraints--and hence, real competitive federalism--some six decades ago, when the traditional constitutional notion of "enumerated" powers collapsed in the wake of the New Deal. It will prove exceedingly difficult to reestablish constitutional constraints because so many powerful interests have acquired huge stakes in a centralized and essentially unconstrained national government.

In several important decisions (each discussed in this book), the United States Supreme Court has reestablished at least some federalism constraints. At the same time, a loose coalition of "leave-us-alone" constituencies--including, for example, religious groups, the term limits movement, home school and school choice organizations, and tax limitation initiatives--have developed a strategic interest in open, decentralized political arrangements. Real Federalism shows that those constituencies and the Supreme Court can, through a "virtuous cycle" of progressive accommodation and (often implicit) cooperation, succeed in advancing federalism.

Real Federalism combines a compelling, jargon-free analysis of important legal decisions and of the Supreme Court's role in modern American politics with a practical interest in reestablishing constitutional federalism.

Michael S. Greve is cofounder and executive director of the Center for Individual Rights and an adjunct fellow of AEI.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

  1. Real Federalism: What It Is, Why It Matters
  2. Federalism's Demise--and Renaissance?
  3. Enumerated Powers?
  4. Federal Commandeering
  5. From Collusive Nationalism to Noncooperation
  6. The Supreme Court's Federalism
  7. Federalism's Constituency
  8. The Court and Congress
  9. Federalism's Possibilities

Notes
Index
About the Author



View Book Summary
Related Links
Federalist Outlook
Federalism Project
AEI Print Index No. 10986


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In Rethinking Federal Housing Policy: How to Make Housing Plentiful and Affordable, Edward L. Glaeser and Joseph Gyourko explain why housing is so expensive in some areas and outline a plan for making it more affordable. They propose a comprehensive overhaul of federal housing policy that takes into account local regulations and economic conditions.