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Dead or Alive?
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16397 |
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BOOK WORLD
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5 / 1989 |
2,668 Words |
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George Carey George Carey is professor of government at Georgetown
University and is the editor of the Political Science
Reviewer. He is coauthor with Willmoore Kendall of Basic
Symbols of the American Political Tradition and coauthor with
Charles Hyneman of A Second Federalist. His forthcoming book
is The Federalist: Design for a Constitutional Republic. |
NEW FEDERALISM
Timothy Conlan
Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution, 1988
274 pp., $34.95
Since the birth of our constitutional republic, the relationship between the national and state governments has been a matter of controversy and concern. As James Madison asserted, our federal system is a "novelty" because it stands between the two traditional forms: a "consolidated," or unified, government and a mere "association," or confederacy of states. Our government constitutes an experiment without parallel: Experiences of past regimes can provide no guidance as to what the precise nature of the federal relationship ought to be.
But in this connection Madison made still another, and perhaps more important, observation that helps to account for our continued preoccupation with federalism: consolidated governments have shown an incapacity to provide "order and justice." Confederate governments have proved too weak to meet the external dangers. In this vein, he warned, those who would deny "the possibility" of federalism "aim a deadly blow at the last hope of true liberty on the face of the Earth." For those who share Madison's view, federalism is thus the object of careful study because its health is seen as vital to the preservation of liberty.
Varying Perspectives On Federalism
Not all students of politics share Madison's beliefs concerning the blessings of federalism. In recent decades, federalism
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