Bill of Attainder
Legislative action declaring someone guilty without a trial; prohibited under the Constitution
Block Grant
Type of grant that comes with less stringent federal administrative conditions and provides recipients more latitude over how to spend grant funds
Categorical Grant
Federal transfer formulated to limit recipients' discretion in the use of funds and subject them to strict administrative criteria
Concurrent Powers
Shared state and federal powers that range from taxing, borrowing, and making and enforcing laws to establishing court systems
Cooperative Federalism
Style of federalism in which both levels of government coordinate their actions to solve national problems, leading to the blending of layers as in a marble cake
Creeping Categorization
Process in which the national government attaches new administrative requirements to block grants or supplants them with new categorical grants
Devolution
Process in which powers from the central government in a unitary system are delegated to subnational units
Dual Federalism
Style of federalism in which the states and national government exercise exclusive authority in distinctly delineated spheres of jurisdiction, creating a layer-cake view of federalism
Elastic Clause
Last clause of Article I, Section 8, which enables the national government "to make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying" out all its constitutional responsibilities
Ex Post Facto Law
Law that criminalizes an act retroactively; prohibited under the Constitution
Federalism
Institutional arrangement that creates two relatively autonomous levels of government, each possessing the capacity to act directly on the people with authority granted by the national constitution
Full Faith and Credit Clause
Found in Article IV, Section 1, of the Constitution, this clause requires states to accept court decisions, public acts, and contracts of other states; also referred to as the comity provision
General Revenue Sharing
Type of federal grant that places minimal restrictions on how state and local governments spend the money
Immigration Federalism
The gradual movement of states into the immigration policy domain traditionally handled by the federal government
new federalism
a style of federalism premised on the idea that the decentralization of policies enhances administrative efficiency, reduces overall public spending, and improves outcomes
nullification
a doctrine promoted by John Calhoun of South Carolina in the 1830s, asserting that if a state deems a federal law unconstitutional, it can nullify it within its borders
privileges and immunities clause
found in Article IV, Section 2, of the Constitution, this clause prohibits states from discriminating against out-of-staters by denying such guarantees as access to courts, legal protection, and property and travel rights
race-to-the-bottom
a dynamic in which states compete to attract business by lowering taxes and regulations, often to workers’ detriment
unfunded mandates
federal laws and regulations that impose obligations on state and local governments without fully compensating them for the costs of implementation
unitary system
a centralized system of government in which the subnational government is dependent on the central government, where substantial authority is concentrated
venue shopping
a strategy in which interest groups select the level and branch of government they calculate will be most receptive to their policy goals
writ of habeas corpus
a petition that enables someone in custody to petition a judge to determine whether that person’s detention is legal