Erin Ryan
Florida State University
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Archive | 2011
Erin Ryan
Introduction Part I: Federalism and the Tug of War Within I. Which Federalism?: The Choice and the Stakes II. Federalism and the Tug of War Within III. American Federalisms: From New Foundations to New Federalism Part II: The Interjurisdictional Gray Area IV. The Rehnquist Revival of Jurisdictional Separation V. The Interjurisdictional Gray Area Part III: Balanced Federalism VI. The Role of Courts: Tenth Amendment Balancing VII. Legislative Balancing Through Intergovernmental Bargaining Part IV: Negotiating Federalism VIII. The Role of the Political Branches: Negotiating Federalism IX. The Structural Safeguards of Federalism Bargaining X. The Procedural Tools of Interpretive Balancing Conclusion: Toward Balance in Federalism
Archive | 2014
Erin Ryan
The intensity of federalism disputes reflects inexorable pressure on all levels of government to meet the increasingly complicated challenges of governance in an ever more interconnected world. Yet even as federalism dilemmas continue to erupt all from all corners, environmental law remains at the forefront of controversy. This chapter argues that environmental law is uniquely prone to federalism discord because it inevitably confronts the core question with which federalism grapples — who gets to decide? — in contexts where state and federal claims to power are simultaneously at their strongest. Environmental problems tend to match the need to regulate the harmful use of specific lands (among the most sacred of local prerogatives) with the need to regulate border-crossing harms caused by these uses (among the strongest of national prerogatives). As a result, it is often impossible to solve the problem without engaging authority on both ends of the spectrum — and disputes erupt when local and national ideas on how best to proceed diverge. Ongoing jurisdictional controversies in energy policy, pollution law, and natural resource management reveal environmental law as the canary in federalism’s coal mine, showcasing the underlying reasons for jurisdictional conflict in all areas of law. Concluding the book, this chapter explores why environmental law regularly raises such thorny questions of federalism, and how environmental law has adapted structurally to manage federalism conflicts. Drawing from the theoretical framework that I introduced in FEDERALISM AND THE TUG OF WAR WITHIN (Oxford, 2012: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1991612), Part II reviews the central objectives of federalism, examining the conflicting values they imply and the resulting tension that suffuses all federalism-sensitive governance. Part III evaluates why federalism conflicts are heightened in the context of environmental law. Divisiveness not only reflects the intense competition among federalism values in environmental governance, it also provides key insights into the core theoretical dilemmas of jurisdictional overlap more generally. Part IV probes how environmental law has adapted to manage the challenges of overlap by asymmetrically allocating local, state, and federal authority within various models of collaborative or coordinated governance. Part V concludes with consideration of what the larger discourse can learn from the dynamic federalism and multiscalar governance innovations emerging from within environmental governance. Through processes that engage stakeholders at all levels of jurisdictional scale, environmental federalism is lighting a path away from the old “zero-sum” model of federalism (which treats every assertion of authority at one jurisdictional level as a loss of authority for the others), and toward a model of negotiated federalism emphasizing consultation, compromise, and coordination.
The Ways of Federalism in Western Countries and the Horizons of Territorial Autonomy in Spain: Volume I, 2013, ISBN 9783642277191, págs. 267-302 | 2012
Erin Ryan
This essay is drawn from a lecture for the “Ways of Federalism” conference (University of the Basque Country, October 19, 2011) and a forthcoming book, Federalism and the Tug of War Within (Oxford, 2012), which explores how constitutional interpreters struggle to reconcile the core tensions within American federalism. The essay reviews the current challenges of the American federal system through the theoretical lens developed in the book, focusing on the role of state-federal bargaining within the U.S. federal system.
Environmental Law | 2006
Erin Ryan
Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum | 2014
Erin Ryan
10 Harvard Negotiation Law Review 231-285 (2005) | 2005
Erin Ryan
Environmental Law | 2015
Erin Ryan
Archive | 2006
Erin Ryan
Maryland Law Review | 2006
Erin Ryan
Negotiation Journal | 2006
Erin Ryan