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Informationen zum Autor Gabrielle Appleby is a PhD candidate at the University of Adelaide researching the constitutional role of the Solicitor-General in Australia. Nicholas Aroney is Professor of Constitutional Law at the Centre for Public, International and Comparative Law in the TC Beirne School of Law, University of Queensland. Thomas John heads the Commonwealth Attorney-General Department's private international law section. Klappentext This volume explains and evaluates Australia's federal system and the options for reform from various comparative and disciplinary perspectives. Zusammenfassung This important contribution to the topic of federalism reform brings together eminent lawyers, economists and political scientists from Australia and overseas to explain, analyse and evaluate the operation of the contemporary Australian federal system and to canvass the prospects of and different options for change. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Australian federalism: past, present and future tense Gabrielle Appleby, Nicholas Aroney and Thomas John; Part I. The Federal-State Balance: 2. The federal balance Stephen Gageler; 3. The incredible shrinking Federation: voyage to a singular state? The Hon. Chief Justice Robert French AC; 4. A sketch of the modern Australian Federation The Hon. Chief Justice Paul de Jersey AC; 5. The still reluctant state: Western Australia and the conceptual foundations of Australian federalism Augusto Zimmermann; 6. The division of powers in federal systems: comparative lessons for Australia Greg Taylor; Part II. Instituting Structural Reform: Comparative Perspectives: 7. Reforming German federalism Arthur B. Gunlicks; 8. Polyphonic federalism: the United States experience Robert A. Schapiro; 9. The rise of coercive federalism in the United States: dynamic change with little formal reform John Kincaid; 10. The bargaining game: Canada as a new model of federal governance Thomas O. Hueglin; 11. 'Bis hierher sollst du kommen und nicht weiter': the German constitutional court and the boundaries of the European integration process Cornelia Koch; Part III. Federalism and Multi-ethnic Societies: 12. Dynamics of federalism: a comparative analysis of recent developments in federations and countries in transition to federalism Thomas Fleiner; 13. Religious identities: testing the underlying preconceptions of Canadian federalism? Jean-Francois Gaudreault-DesBiens; 14. Foedus pacificum: a response to ethnic regionalism within nation states Suri Ratnapala; 15. Federal diversity in Australia: a counter narrative Nicholas Aroney, Scott Prasser and Alison Taylor; Part IV. Fiscal Federalism: 16. Fiscal federalism in Canada: principles, practices, problems Robin Boadway; 17. Fiscal federalism: then and now Brian Galligan; 18. Fiscal decentralisation and macroeconomic performance in Australia Philip Bodman; Part V. Reforming Australia's Federal System: 19. Escaping purgatory: public opinion and the future of Australia's federal system A. J. Brown; 20. The Rudd reforms and the future of Australian federalism Alan Fenna and Geoff Anderson; 21. Co-operative arrangements in comparative perspective Cheryl Saunders; 22. Federalism and the Australian judicial system - back to the future: the autochthonous expedient and other devices The Hon. Justice Margaret White; 23. Federalism in Australia: gazing in the crystal ball of constitutional reform Anne Twomey. ...
Texte du rabat
This volume explains and evaluates Australia's federal system and the options for reform from various comparative and disciplinary perspectives.
Résumé
This important contribution to the topic of federalism reform brings together eminent lawyers, economists and political scientists from Australia and overseas to explain, analyse and evaluate the operation of the contemporary Australian federal system and to canvass the prospects of and different options for change.
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