Comparative Federalism in the Devolution Era

Portada
Neil Colman McCabe
Lexington Books, 2002 - 352 páginas
The decline of statism as the world's dominant ideology has ignited a fierce debate over the evolving shape and power of federalism in global society. The popular demand for devolution has shifted the locus of power from national government to smaller regional units and heralded the reconceptualization of international law away from the idea of sovereignty, toward one of jurisdiction. This timely set of essays studies the impact wrought by these centrifugal forces across Europe, Africa, and the Americas, and analyzes the latest movements for constitutional change, self-determination, and separation. Comparative Federalism in the Devolution Era offers political scientists and legal scholars a new perspective on the diverse nature and exercise of postmodern federalism, and the continuing struggle between differing views of the national-local relationship.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

III
1
IV
15
IX
27
XIII
61
XIV
81
XVIII
119
XIX
147
XX
173
XXII
217
XXIII
247
XXVI
269
XXXI
293
XXXII
327
XXXVI
339
XXXVII
351
Derechos de autor

XXI
195

Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (2002)

Neil Colman McCabe is Professor of Law at South Texas College of Law.

Información bibliográfica