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-rw-r--r--PROGRESS3
-rw-r--r--rich/14_federalism48
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+ Sep 2 lecture (INTA)
+ Sep 4 lecture (INTA)
+ Sep 9 lecture (INTA)
-- Sep 11 lecture (INTA)
++ Sep 11 lecture (INTA)
- Sep 14 lecture (INTA)
+- Sep 16 lecture (INTA)
+ Sign of Four + Other portrayal of Sherlock
- Math Chap 2 + HW2
+ HIST readings (3 posted in the Canvas post)
diff --git a/rich/14_federalism b/rich/14_federalism
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+When is a federal system the best?
+- Unitary = uniform policies with all the same laws and regulations
+- Federal = represent states, heterogenous policies
+- Federal = more flexible, for individual rights and businesses
+ - Ex: midwesterners care about farming
+ - Hyperlocality vs large urban centers (service industries)
+- Unitary = high regulation of large corporations and industries
+ - Also social regulation
+- Federal = higher cultural diversity
+ - Unitary systems struggle with incorporating diversity
+ - Assimilation, single/little-varying political culture
+A federal system is best when you
+- Care less about efficiency of governance
+- Have a more heterogenous population
+- Need to let interest groups and subnationals represent
+
+Legislature
+- Judicial, executive enforce
+- Legislature represents "nation-state as a whole"
+- Make laws
+- Classifying legislatures
+ 1) How is the executive chosen?
+ Parliamentary = Prime Minister comes out of legislature
+ Presidential = people vote for the president
+ - Different constituencies
+ - PM responsible to parties/lawmakers
+ - President responsible to the people
+ - In the US system, their powers are independent
+ - Studied as separate institutions, unlike parliament
+ 2) How many chambers?
+ - Bicameral or Unicameral
+ Unicameral = legislation is fast
+ Bicameral = legislation is slow
+ Bicameral = responsibility for laws is less clear
+ - Confounding of power
+ - Senate is more powerful, but not perceived as such
+ Unicameral = more of a broad responsibility to the country
+ - Good society
+ Bicameral = responsibility to constituents, parties, interests
+ - "Specific"
+ - Voter loyalty to party, districts, representatives
+ - Very little insulation from public opinion, esp. localness
+ Cost: $bicameral > $unicameral
+ 3) Full vs part time legislators
+ - Georgia senators only work 40 days
+ - Maybe more subject to corruption, less diligence
+ - Care less about the job
+ - US senators full time