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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4-page paper examines new federalism as well as social programs and a liberal bias towards public policy. There are 3 sources cited.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: PG56_GPAfederalismrevision.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. New Federalism Research Compiled for The
Paper Store, Inc. by P. Giltman 7/2010 Please (1) From the 1970s to the present, a shift in
the evolution of public policy moved toward a New Federalism. How did this effect public policy? Was this positive or negative? Why? Defined as a political philosophy in
which a transfer of powers occurs from the United States federal government to the states, new federalism is a recent idea to empower the individual states by giving them some
autonomy to handle certain situations on their own without the federal government superseding or intervening. With so many states operating in debt over the last several decades, state capitals have
begun asking the federal government for some monetary assistance. However, the fact that states are so broke offers unprecedented opportunities for the federal government to intrude into areas that were
strictly the purview of states. Nowadays, state and local governments are passing dozens of laws in areas where Washington was paralyzed, including immigration, climate change, and expansion of health coverage.
Take Arizonas recent immigration laws for example. States had also taken the lead in regulatory areas where Washington appeared moribund, such as financial services and tobacco. There was a feeling
among governors and mayors that Washington was so partisan and so distracted by the Iraqi war that more and more domestic policy-making would fall on their shoulders (Greenblat, 2010). States
are also going to be much busier trying to meet federal goals than pioneering new approaches of their own. The focus will now be on national goals, so the nation
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