Results 11 to 20 of about 1,025 (95)

Home‐rule versus non‐territorial autonomy? Western European national movements and their views on the minority question, 1919–1939

open access: yesNations and Nationalism, Volume 29, Issue 2, Page 482-497, April 2023., 2023
Abstract The leading elites of the ethnonationalist movements that developed in the aftermath of World War I in Western Europe usually refused to see their nations and territories as ‘national minorities’. In their view, they were stateless nations or nationalities.
Xosé M. Núñez Seixas
wiley   +1 more source

TRUMP, BOLSONARO, AND THE FRAMING OF THE COVID‐19 CRISIS

open access: yesWorld Affairs, Volume 184, Issue 4, Page 413-440, Winter 2021., 2021
In the aftermath of the global COVID‐19 crisis, whereas many world leaders enacted swift lockdown orders and robust testing regimes to preserve public health and to speed up economic recovery, Donald Trump in the United States and Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil responded to outbreaks by publicly downplaying the significance of the crisis and argued that ...
Daniel Béland   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Environmental Federalism in Indian Country: Sovereignty, Primacy, and Environmental Protection

open access: yesPolicy Studies Journal, Volume 49, Issue 3, Page 887-908, August 2021., 2021
Extensive research on “environmental federalism” investigates the effects of shared state‐federal implementation on policy outcomes under the landmark American environmental laws of the 1970s. But these laws originally made no mention of American Indian tribal lands, and subsequent research on environmental federalism has given them little attention ...
Mellie Haider, Manuel P. Teodoro
wiley   +1 more source

What Makes Member States opt for Hybrid Implementation Structures When the Federal Policy Asks for It?

open access: yesReview of Policy Research, Volume 43, Issue 3, May 2026.
ABSTRACT Public private partnership literature promotes hybrid implementation structures as a potential solution to deal with limited resources and high levels of implementation burden and complexity. Despite the growing relevance and promises of hybrid implementation structures, we lack systematic knowledge on what makes governments opt for the ...
Stefan Wittwer, Fritz Sager
wiley   +1 more source

Implementing Innovative Climate Change Procedural Instruments to Mitigate Livestock Farming Foodprint in Colorado State, United States of America

open access: yesReview of Policy Research, Volume 42, Issue 6, Page 1428-1449, November 2025.
ABSTRACT In Colorado, cattle farming—the state's leading agricultural sector—is a significant source of methane emissions. In response, both the government and producers have initiated efforts to mitigate the effects of climate change and enhance sustainability.
Lauren Lecuyer, Mathilde Verrier
wiley   +1 more source

The Black Hole of Centralization: Subnational Emergency Invocations During the Tenures of Indira Gandhi and Narendra Modi

open access: yesAsian Politics &Policy, Volume 17, Issue 3, July 2025.
ABSTRACT The constitutional provision of “Subnational Emergency” under Article 356 of the Constitution of India, 1950, extraordinarily empowers the central (union) government to acquire executive and legislative powers of the states (subnational units) on the occurrence of an undefined and largely unrestrained state of “constitutional machinery failure”
Panch Rishi Dev Sharma
wiley   +1 more source

The border as temporal horizon: a borderlands massacre and the contested futures of federalism in eastern Ethiopia

open access: yesJournal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Volume 31, Issue 2, Page 415-435, June 2025.
Abstract In 1995, a coalition of former rebel groups redrew Ethiopia's map, establishing an ethnic‐federal system. By 2017, internal border conflicts signalled federalism's potential unravelling. This article analyses expectations about federalism's future among Somalis in Ethiopia, drawing on anthropologies of time to understand how everyday processes
Daniel K. Thompson
wiley   +1 more source

Executive hour or political competition in times of crisis?—An analysis of public crisis reporting on the COVID‐19 lockdowns in Germany

open access: yesEuropean Policy Analysis, Volume 11, Issue 1, Page 32-53, Winter 2025.
Abstract While much work has looked at how governments responded to the Corona pandemic, little consideration has been given to how the crisis affected party competition and what positions political actors took during this period. How were political actors' positions on COVID‐19 portrayed in daily newspapers? And how can we explain these patterns?
Katja Demler
wiley   +1 more source

The Canada Water Act, 1970: Did Parliamentarians Seek Cooperative Federalism?

open access: yesCanadian Public Administration, Volume 67, Issue 3, Page 344-360, September 2024.
Abstract In 1970, freshwater pollution concerns led to the introduction of the Clean Water Act (CWA), which signaled the federal government's shift towards cooperative federalism in the shared constitutional space of water governance. A unilateral environmental federalism approach supported the enactment of the CWA and reinforced the new two‐prong ...
Patricia Hania
wiley   +1 more source

The impact of party competition on LGBTI+ rights: Evidence from Spanish autonomous regions (1990–2022)

open access: yesPolitics &Policy, Volume 52, Issue 4, Page 801-827, August 2024.
Abstract Political competition accelerates the enactment of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans*, and intersexual rights (LGBTI+) due to the dynamic, rational behavior of mainstream parties across the political aisle to adapt to the sociopolitical environment.
Joel Cantó, Javier Arregui
wiley   +1 more source

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