Federal Scholar

Since 2013, the Institute for Comparative Federalism welcomes a Federal Scholar in Residence in order to enhance the comparative study of federalism and regionalism by providing an opportunity for exchange among scholars in the field and to thereby inspire and develop new project ideas. The winner of each is granted a research stay of up to three weeks at Eurac Research in Bolzano/Bozen, South Tyrol, Italy and gets the opportunity to discuss and present their research on issues related to comparative federalism, regionalism and/or intergovernmental relations with international experts in the field.

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Secession in the EU multi-level constitutional order
ScienceBlogs
eureka

Secession in the EU multi-level constitutional order

Nikos SkoutarisNikos Skoutaris
Beyond typologies: federal scholars and federal studies
ScienceBlogs
eureka

Beyond typologies: federal scholars and federal studies

Francesco PalermoFrancesco Palermo
Can federalism protect subnational units from national authoritarianism?
ScienceBlogs
eureka

Can federalism protect subnational units from national authoritarianism?

James A. GardnerJames A. Gardner
Multi-level governance and the environment in the pandemic era
ScienceBlogs
eureka

Multi-level governance and the environment in the pandemic era

Rebecca NelsonRebecca Nelson
State Nationalism and Macchiatones
ScienceBlogs
eureka

State Nationalism and Macchiatones

Daniel CetràDaniel Cetrà
On the relationship between decentralized governance and pluralism
ScienceBlogs
eureka

On the relationship between decentralized governance and pluralism

Andrew J. HardingAndrew J. Harding
Federalism and inequality: A long-debated relationship with few empirical tests
ScienceBlogs
eureka

Federalism and inequality: A long-debated relationship with few empirical tests

Lucas GonzálezLucas González
Courts, Rights, and Federal Constitutionalism
ScienceBlogs
eureka

Courts, Rights, and Federal Constitutionalism

Erin DelaneyErin Delaney
Contentious Federalism and the Multinational State
ScienceBlogs
eureka

Contentious Federalism and the Multinational State

Karlo BastaKarlo Basta