ABSTRACT

Federalism has experienced a remarkable renaissance in recent decades – as an alternative way to accommodate ethnic differences; as a tool to combat remote, undemocratic and ineffective central governments; and lastly, as a means to promote economic performance in the developing world through decentralisation.

This book seeks to bring different aspects and perspectives of federalism studies closer together, by providing an analytical framework which transcends the sub-fields and encourages contributors to look beyond the comfort zones of their own disciplinary approaches to the topic. The authors seek to achieve this aim by structuring the contributions around four dimensions federalism studies:

 

• the development and design of federal institutions;

• federalism and democratic participation, representation and accountability;

• federalism and the accommodation of territorially-based ethnic, cultural and linguistic differences;

• federalism and public policy.

 

With a strong comparative framework, New Directions in Federalism Studies will be of interest to students and scholars of Federalism, Government, Regionalism, and Multi-level Governance. It will also offer insights of relevance to Comparative Politics, Public Policy, Public Administration, Nationalism, and West European Politics.

chapter 2|18 pages

Understanding federal change

Types of federalism and institutional evolution in the Spanish and German federal systems

chapter 3|16 pages

More courageous than expected?

The 2006 reform of German federalism

chapter 5|15 pages

Patronage-preserving federalism?

Legislative malapportionment and subnational fiscal policies

chapter 6|23 pages

Electoral patterns in federal countries

Moderating in the case of Spain

chapter 7|20 pages

Party politics in multi-level systems

Party responses to new challenges in European democracies

chapter 9|16 pages

Federalism and ethnic conflict management

Rival hypotheses, the attitudinal missing link and comparative evidence

chapter 11|16 pages

Making fiscal federalism self-enforcing

Germany, Australia, and Switzerland compared