1 / 11

FEDERALISM: WHAT IS IT?

FEDERALISM: WHAT IS IT?. Forum of Federations An Intensive Course on Democratic Federalism. OVERVIEW. Federalism in context Federalism: What is it? Federalism: What is it not? Decentralized political systems Some features of federalism When does federalism make sense?

Download Presentation

FEDERALISM: WHAT IS IT?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FEDERALISM: WHAT IS IT? Forum of Federations An Intensive Course on Democratic Federalism

  2. OVERVIEW Federalism in context Federalism: What is it? Federalism: What is it not? Decentralized political systems Some features of federalism When does federalism make sense? The critique of federalism Defence of federalism Concluding observations

  3. FEDERALISM IN CONTEXT • Globalization • Multiple governments; multiple identities • Rapid political change • 25 federations • 40% of the world’s population (2 billion people)

  4. WHAT IS IT? • Constitutional government: shared rule and self rule • Two orders of government, both relating directly to citizens • Distribution of power and revenue sources between the two orders of government • Representation of regions in the centre, often in an upper house • Basic rules normally amendable only with consent of constituent units • Umpire to settle disputes – courts or referendums • Intergovernmental relations for overlapping concerns • ……… • Within this framework, great variety

  5. FEDERALISM: WHAT IS IT NOT? • It is not unitary government, where sovereignty is concentrated in the central government • It is not confederal government, where sovereignty is retained by the associated states • It is federal government, where sovereignty is shared between the two orders of government

  6. DECENTRALIZED SYSTEMS • Decentralized unitary states • Quasi-federal systems • Federations • Confederal arrangements • Mixed systems

  7. SOME FEATURES OF FEDERALISM • AMatter of choice, mutual agreement • The Result of compromise • The Requirement of balance and restraint • A Pragmatic arrangement • A Highly contemporary form of government • A Highly diverse form of government

  8. WHEN DOES FEDERALISM MAKE SENSE? • In very large countries • When accommodating history, tradition and local loyalties as new states are being formed • When accommodating significant ethnic, cultural, linguistic or religious differentiation in existing states • When there is a mix of these factors

  9. THE CRITIQUE OF FEDERALISM • Complex, slow to change, tolerates uneven development and regional inequality, duplicates functions and services • The allocation of responsibilities and resources to two orders of government is difficult • Thought to be an expensive system of government • ‘Minorities within minorities’ problem • Unstable: A halfway house en route to secession

  10. DEFENCE OF FEDERALISM • Helps to establish peace and security, construct common values, and foster pluralist democracy • Protects and moderates human diversity • ‘Losers’ at the national level can become ‘winners’ at the regional level • Increases political participation, with multiple access points; greater choice • Encourages experimentation • Brings government closer to the people, fosters responsive administration

  11. CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS • No magic bullet. Federalism by itself is not ‘The Answer’ • Federal government is constitutional government • For countries in crisis, federalism is often the ‘least bad option’ – better than any of the alternatives that present themselves. Everyone’s second choice. • Federalism is typically built on hard-won compromise, where no party is in a position to win absolute victory

More Related