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vii CONTENTS Preface ix James E. Fleming and Jacob T. Levy Contributors xi PART I. FEDERALISM, POSITIVE BENEFITS, AND NEGATIVE LIBERTIES 1. Defending Dual Federalism: A Self-Defeating Act 3 Sotirios A. Barber 2. Defending Dual Federalism: A Bad Idea, but Not Self-Defeating 22 Michael Blake 3. The Puzzling Persistence of Dual Federalism 34 Ernest A. Young 4. Foot Voting, Federalism, and Political Freedom 83 Ilya Somin PART II. CONSTITUTIONS, FEDERALISM, AND SUBSIDIARITY 5. Federalism and Subsidiarity: Perspectives from U.S. Constitutional Law 123 Steven G. Calabresi and Lucy D. Bickford 6. Subsidiarity, the Judicial Role, and the Warren Court’s Contribution to the Revival of State Government 190 Vicki C. Jackson 7. Competing Conceptions of Subsidiarity 214 Andreas Føllesdal viii Contents 8. Subsidiarity and Robustness: Building the Adaptive Efficiency of Federal Systems 231 Jenna Bednar PART III. THE ENTRENCHMENT OF LOCAL AND PROVINCIAL AUTONOMY, INTEGRITY, AND PARTICIPATION 9. Cities and Federalism 259 Daniel Weinstock 10. Cities, Subsidiarity, and Federalism 291 Loren King 11. The Constitutional Entrenchment of Federalism 332 Jacob T. Levy PART IV. REMAPPING FEDERALISM(S) 12. Federalism(s)’ Forms and Norms: Contesting Rights, De-essentializing Jurisdictional Divides, and Temporizing Accommodations 363 Judith Resnik Index 437 ...

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