The evolution of federalism and executive power in Canada and Australia

Date

2013

Authors

Banfield, Andrew
Sayers, Anthony

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Abstract

Canada and Australia share a common institutional legacy, with constitutions that combine the power distributing impulse of federalism with the concentration of authority associated with parliamentary government. But the two federations have experienced sharply different historical trajectories, with Canada decentralizing while Australia has centralized. This instituional divergence in part reflects distinctive patterns in negotiating executive authority across the federal divide. Canadians have relied upon the high stakes, episodic intergovernmental relations of executive federalism, more open to radical shifts in both direction and momentum. Australians have experienced more regularized intergovernmental and inter-institutional path-dependent forms of negotiation as seen in the Council of Australian Governments and the Senate. As a result, the federal balance of executive authority appears contested in Canada, but relatively settled in Australia.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Type

Book chapter

Book Title

Federal Dynamics Continuity, Change, and the Varieties of Federalism

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until