000 01424pab a2200157 454500
008 180718b2001 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aWalker, David B.
245 _aNew federalism. III. a reformed system in the making?
260 _c2001
300 _ap.51-75
520 _aThe current intergovernmental initiatives of the president, the Congress, and the Court amount to different versions of a New Federalism III. Each of the New Federalisms (Nixon's, Reagan's, and the combined but conflicting undertakings of the current national leadership and to a lesser degree, of the states and localities) have focused on devolution, deregulation, reduction in the number of categorical programs by enacting block grants, and a much reduced federal role in the federal system. Yet, there were and are significant differences among the three. The ambivalent centralizing-while-devolving record of the first two and a potentially similar outcome of the current IGR restructuring endeavors underscore the continuing conflict between the forces of noncentralization, as against those favoring centralization within the overall system. Thus far, no clear-cut intergovernmental winners can be identified in the current battling over the future of American federalism. - Reproduced
650 _aFederalism - United States
650 _aFederalism
773 _aInternational Journal of Public Administration
909 _a48418
999 _c48418
_d48418