The Implosion of American Federalism 
By Robert F. Nagel
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA 2002-11-28 | 224 Pages | ISBN: 
0195158415 | PDF | 1.3 MB

At a time of unprecedented national power, why do so many Americans believe 
that our nationhood is fragile and precarious? Why the talk--among politicians, 
academics, and jurists--of "coups d'etat," of culture wars, of confederation, 
of constitutional breakdown? In this wide-ranging book, Robert Nagel proposes a 
surprising znswer: that anxiety about national unity is caused by 
centralization itself. Moreover, he proposes that this anxiety has dangerous 
cultural consequences that are, in an implosive cycle, pushing the country 
toward ever greater centralization.

Carefully examining recent landmark Supreme Court cases that protect states' 
rights, Nagel argues that the federal judiciary is not leading and is not 
likely to lead a revival of the complex system called federalism. A robust 
version of federalism requires appreciation for political conflict and respect 
for disagreement about constitutional meaning, both values that are deeply 
antithetical to the Court's function. That so many believe this most 
centralized of our Nation's institutions is protecting, even overprotecting, 
state power is itself a sign of the depletion of those understandings necessary 
to sustain the federal system.
Instead of a support for federalism, Nagel finds a commitment to radical 
nationalism throughout the constitutional law establishment. He traces this 
commitment to traditionally American traits like perfectionism, optimism, 
individualism, and legalism. Under modern conditions of centralization, these 
attractive traits are leading to unattractive social consequences, including 
tolerance, fearfulness, utopianism, and deceptiveness. They are degrading our 
political discourse. All this encourages further centralization and further 
cultural deterioration.

This book puts the major federalism decisions within the framework of the 
Court's overall record, including its record on individual rights in areas like 
abortion, homosexuality, and school desegregation. And, giving special 
attention to public debate over privacy and impeachment, it places modern 
constitutional law in the context of political discourse more generally.

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