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21 St. John's J. Legal Comment. 527 (2006-2007)
Stop Federalism before It Kills Again: Reflections on Hurricane Katrina

handle is hein.journals/sjjlc21 and id is 535 raw text is: STOP FEDERALISM BEFORE IT KILLS
AGAIN: REFLECTIONS ON HURRICANE
KATRINA
STEPHEN M. GRIFFIN*
Like ideas, institutions have consequences.    Federalism  is
both.    To  understand    federalism  within  the  context of
constitutionalism in the United States, we must look beyond the
conventional definition that runs in terms of primary and
subordinate   sovereignties.    From   a   developmental   and
institutional perspective, Our Federalism is just as much a
commitment to localism and the value of the fragmentation of
government authority as it is a commitment to maintaining dual
national and state governments. And it is just as much a set of
values, even an ideology, as it is a system of institutions.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, President George W.
Bush remarked, It's a - very important for us to understand the
relationship  between   the  federal government, the      state
government, and the local government when it comes to major
catastrophe.' The President was correct in seeing federalism as
central to what was largely a government-created disaster. One
could wonder, however, how it was that there was not a better
understanding about who would do what prior to Katrina's
terrible landfall.
Hurricane Katrina operated like a CT or MRI scan on
governance in the United States and the results were not pretty.
It is widely agreed that our separated system of federal, state,
and local jurisdictions did not work together and did not work
. Rutledge C. Clement, Jr. Professor in Constitutional Law, Tulane Law School.
Prepared for St. John's Conference on Federalism Past, Federalism Future, March 3,
2006. Email: sgriffin@law.tulane.edu.
1 CNN REPORTS, KATRINA: STATE OF EMERGENCY 128 (Andrews McMeel Publishing
2005).

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