A.P. Gov’t Name:

Ms. Newman Period:

The Evolution of Federalism

·  Definition of Federalism:

·  Advantages of Federalism:

o  Multiple levels of government provide flexibility

o  Citizens have many ways to influence their government

·  Disadvantages of Federalism:

o  The complexity of the federal system

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·  Coordination confusion

·  Slow to respond to crisis

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o  Federalism is ______

·  Dual (Layer Cake) Federalism: Views the Constitution as giving a limited list of powers to the national government, leaving the rest to sovereign states.

·  Cooperative (Marble Cake) Federalism:

·  The Significance of the 10th Amendment

·  Why Divide Authority in the First Place?

o  The Constitution may have never been ratified if the Framers had pushed for a unitary system

o  Federalism was a compromise, allowing the states to maintain their independence

o  Why?

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“State-Centered Federalism” 1787-1868

·  From the adoption of the Constitution to the end of the Civil War, the states were the most important units of the American Federal System

·  McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) decided during this phase

o  Construes “______” to favor expansion of national authority

o  Doctrine of Implied National Powers

o  Doctrine of National Supremacy

·  Doctrine of ______: Each state could declare any laws or actions of the national government “null and void”.

·  Doctrine of ______: States could choose to withdraw from the United States if they wanted. Used by the Confederate States in the Civil War.

“Dual Federalism” 1868-1913

“Cooperative Federalism” 1913-1964

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·  New Deal= centralized response to national crisis, become nationally-based welfare state

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·  ______controls commerce leading up to and during WWII

“Centralized” or “Creative” Federalism 1964-1980

·  LBJ (1963-1969) marked a critical point in the evolution of federalism

·  Federal government clearly had its own ______goals

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·  Federal funds were directed to states, local governments, and a wide variety of society programs

New Federalism (1980-?)

Devolution (Beginning in 1995)

·  The Republican “______” called for devolution—the transfer of political and economic power to the states (with decreased federal funding)

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The Supreme Court’s Shift in Perspective

·  Beginning in ______, justices interested in granting more deference to state authority gained a slim 5-4 majority in the Supreme Court

·  The Constitutional Counterrevolution

·  A return to an older version of federalism not embraced since the constitutional crisis over the ______in the 1930s

o  United States v. Lopez (1995)

o  United States v. Morrison (2000)

The Changing Nature of Federal Grants

·  In 1996 there was a shift from Categorical Grants to Block Grants

·  2 types of Categorical Grants (Grants-in-Aid)

·  Block Grants (Revenue-sharing Grants): far more flexible

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·  Grants-in-Aid:

The Future of Federalism

·  The persistence of international terrorism, the war in Afghanistan, and rising deficits all ensure a substantial role for the national government in the years to come

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·  No Child Left Behind