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  1. well-being. In short, the founders of our country envisioned that the federal government would have broad powers to create and administer laws for the benefit of its citizens. The topics covered in the Preamble also are inherently of concern to psy - chology. For example, psychological scientists study justice, peace, aggression,

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  2. guish federal systems from other kinds of government. The following characteristics are usually thought to make a system of government federal: • At least two orders of government,one for the whole country and the other for the regions. Each government has a direct electoral rela-tionship with its citizens. The regions have many names: we shall

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  4. The recent explicit and abrupt rift between science and federal policymaking governance highlights the somewhat tenuous relationship between the 2. As a discipline, the question of engaging public policy asks when, how, and under what conditions. However, simply producing more science or informing policymakers about our science is insufficient and ineffective (John, 2017). This paper argues ...

  5. The U.S. Declaration of Independence is an example. The internal relationships of a federal system reflect a special kind of sharing that must prevail among the partners based on a mutual recognition of the integrity of each partner and the attempt to foster a special unity among them.

  6. The idiosyncratic elements of each nation’s federalism are a function of the social, economic, and political forces that contest politics; the nature of the ethnic, linguistic, political, and other cleavages; and decisions made by leaders in the past. Keywords: British North America Act, Bill Clinton, federalism, inequality, Quebec, sex ...

  7. Comparing Federal Systems xi Foreword to the First Edition For many observers, the Canadian debate over the reform of our federal systems has fallen into predicable patterns. Decades of argument about the central issues facing the federation seem to have etched deep grooves in our collective con-

  8. 250. Contrasting Unitary and Federal Systems. that will help us understand the relationship between regimes, institutions, and cultures. Indeed, it may even be possible to develop a taxonomy of regimes and. political organizations from earliest times to the present. References. Adamolekun, L. (ed.) (1991).

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