Comparative federalism
Comparative federalism is a branch of comparative politics and comparative government, the main focus of which is the study of the nature, operation, possibilities and
effects of federal governance forms across two or more cases.
Comparative studies cover the most important aspects of federalism, i.e. theory, institutions, constitutions including constitutional laws, foundations, establishment and organization of federal systems, functions or a system of relations between administrative structures at various levels and financial issues, for example, the distribution of tax revenues and expenditures. One more aspect can be added to this — examples of the functioning of federal systems and problems that arise when implementing a federal organization.
Currently, comparative federalism is the core of federalism research. It is applicable to any topic in the field, including second chambers, courts, intergovernmental councils, the trajectory of federations, practices of fiscal federalism, accommodation of potentially conflicting identity groups, and secessionism.
Origin
The ubiquity of comparative federalism is directly related to the development of comparative studies and their prevalence in other fields of political science. The evolution of comparative politics is seen as punctuated by two revolutions: the behavioral revolution, during the immediate post-World War II years until the mid-1960s, and the second scientific revolution, which started around the end of the Cold War and is still ongoing. On both occasions, the impetus for change came from developments in the field of American politics and was justified in the name of science.The surge in the use of comparative methods in federalism research can be attributed to the above-mentioned events, since federalism first became a significant field of study in the mid-twentieth century. For many years federalism was considered an object that did not deserve the attention of political scientists, except as a system of relations between governments of various levels in special federal entities, primarily in the United States. However, in the second half of the twentieth century, it became one of the key topics of world politics and, accordingly, political science, as the number of federal states increased, as well as the interaction of many states at the supranational level acquired the features of federalism. These phenomena coincided with the popularization of comparative politics, which led to the emergence and spread of the approach of comparative federalism in political science.
Classification
Comparative studies of federalism can be divided into three main groups:Features
By taking into consideration the methods and experiences of many cases, comparative federalism aims to go beyond what can be learned from the study of a single federation:- Understands federalism as a general phenomenon
- Emphasizes the uniqueness of a particular case
- Proposes explanations about how federal systems come into being, function, and evolve
Multi-level governance
Early in the 1990s, a new method of studying the European integration process called "multi-level governance" appeared. It aimed to broaden the scope of the analysis by including institutional layers above and beyond the intergovernmental or supranational viewpoints. This research brought in findings from comparative federalism and depicted the European Union as a unique system characterized by a distinctive interconnection among multiple levels of governance. "EU is an outlier in comparative federalism: a federation-in-the-making with confederal characteristics".Research on multi-level governance has spurred innovation in comparative federalism. While traditional comparative federalism, by stressing legal and administrative aspects, has limited itself to the study of federal countries, it is conceivable to extend the insight gained to multi-level regimes. The interconnection between these approaches promotes new discoveries in the field of each of them.
Impact of the theory
The comparative study of the federal system has benefited from various advances provided by the theory of multi-level governance:- New levels of government considered
governance points to the increasingly significant interplays between different domestic and supranational governance levels. At the same time, research on multi-level governance rekindled interest in subnational units, departments and urban areas.
- Shift from the study of federal constitutions to the study of interplay among actors at multiple governmental tiers
- Increase in attention to individual policy areas and policy performance