Bill of Federalism/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Bill of Federalism, or pages that link to Bill of Federalism or to this page or whose text contains "Bill of Federalism".
Parent topics
- United States Constitution [r]: Document that states the fundamental constitutional law of the United States of America. [e]
- U.S. constitutional law [r]: Interpretation and implementation of the United States Constitution, the principal authority for which being the Supreme Court of the United States [e]
- Randy Barnett [r]: Faculty member at Georgetown Law Center, teaching constitutional law; originator of the Bill of Federalism initiative; argued the medical cannabis case of Gonzales v. Raich (2004) in the Supreme Court of the United States [e]
Subtopics
- Brooks Bayne [r]: Tea Party Movement National Leadership Team; Los Angeles, California; The Bill of Federalism Project Contact [e]
- Tea Party movement [r]: A loose affiliation of various groups and individuals, typically strongly fiscally and often socially conservative, involved in the restructuring of the U.S. political right; especially critical of tax increases and increases in government spending. [e]
- Original intent [r]: In U.S. constitutional law, especially when arguing for strict constructionism, interpretation based onwritings of the Framers, such as the Federalist Papers [e]
- Original understanding [r]: Supplementing or complementing original intent in U.S. constitutional law, the deliberations of the state conventions that ratified the Constitution [e]
- John Yoo [r]: Professor of law at the University of California at Berkeley School of Law since 1993; between 2001 and 2003; deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel, working on separation of powers, presidential authority, intelligence interrogation and extraordinary rendition; Visiting Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute [e]