Comment on "A Federalist Explanation of Municipal Elections"

Authors

  • Rodney E. Hero

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15763/issn.2374-7781.1992.13.0.231-236

Abstract

While efforts at theoretical advancement in the study of U.S. urban polities and of federalism certainly are to be welcomed, such efforts bear heavy conceptual and theoretical burdens. These burdens include the basic and longstanding ambiguity of the concept of “federalism” itself, along with the relative dearth and questionable persuasiveness of previous “theories” of federalism and of urban politics.

References

Clarke, Susan E. 1987. More Autonomous Policy Orientations: An Analytic Framework. In Clarence N. Stone and Heywood T. Sanders, eds., The Politics of Urban Development. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas.

Diamond, Martin. 1985. What the Framers Meant By Federalism. In Laurence J. O'Toole, ed., American Intergovernmental Relations. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Press.

Elazar, Daniel J. 1984. American Federalism: AViewfrom the States. New York: Harper and Row.

Elkin, Stephen L. 1987. City and Regime in the American Republic. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Hero, Rodney E. and Kathleen M. Beatty. 1989. The Elections of Federico Pena as Mayor of Denver. Social Science Quarterly 70: 300-310.

Peterson, Paul E. 1981. City Limits. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

_______ , Barry G. Rabe and Kenneth K. Wong. 1986. When Federalism Works. Washington, DC: Brookings.

Rothman, Rozann. 1978. The Ambiguity of Am eric an FederalTheory. Publius8:103-122.

Stein, RobertM. 1989. Market Maximization of Individual Preferences and Metropolitan Municipal Service Responsibility. Urban Affairs Quarterly 25: 86-116.

_______ . 1990. Economic Voting for Governor and U. S. Senator: The Electoral Consequences of Federalism. Journal of Politics 52: 29-53.

Young, Cheryl D. and Robert M. Stein. 1992. A Federalist Explanation of Municipal Elections. Midsouth Political Science Journal 13: 211-229

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Published

1992-07-01

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Section

Articles