Abstract

Just as President Nixon's Federalism was beginning to take hold, a new theory of domestic affairs emerged on the scene, referred to in this paper as the New It calls for action by the federal government to reform the structure of state and local governments in order to improve their capacity, presumably to take advantage of revenue sharing funds and other similarly broadened federal grants-in-aid. This new theory of domestic affairs is beginning to pick up themes and theorists on a basis which suggests that major issues of the future will be cast in terms of the Federalism versus the Structuralism. What do these two theories involve?

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