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Session Submission Type: Created Panel
Federalism is a dynamic arena for the forging of political conflict. Yet the nature of these conflicts, as well as their potential for resolution, varies across the national and sub-national institutional contexts. The papers in this panel consider how policymakers in contemporary federal systems manage an increasingly wide range of conflicts regarding labor rights, sovereignty, transportation, and electricity.
Protecting Workers: State Sovereignty and Local Policymaking on a National Stage - Michael Callaghan Pisapia, Wake Forest University; Elizabeth Reni Wemlinger
Multisector Governance and Public Support for Transportation Investments - Iris Hui, Stanford University; Bruce E. Cain, Stanford University; Elisabeth R. Gerber, University of Michigan
Powering Federalism: Partisan Divergence and Nonacquiescence to Federal Policy - Nicholas G. Napolio, University of Southern California; Jordan Carr Peterson, Texas Christian University
Bargaining for Legitimacy in Dual Legitimacy Constitutional Systems - Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia; Olga V. Shvetsova, SUNY, Binghamton University