Corporative federalism, not to be confused with the 'cooperative federalism' of the New Deal, is a system of federalism not based on the common federalist idea of relative land area or nearest spheres of influence for governance, but on fiduciary jurisdiction to corporate personhood, where groups who are considered incorporated members of their own prerogative structure by willed agreement can delegate their individual effective legislature within the overall government.
The Austro-Hungarian Empire had a version of corporative federalism that gave its wide demographic of different ethnicities each their own individual rights within their own assemblies instead of by relation to the territory of the empire.[1]
References
See also
- Consociational state
- Extraterritoriality
- Horizontalism
- Kritarchy
- Multicameralism
- Pillarisation - also known as 'vertical federalism'
- Polycentric law
- Regulatory agency
- Symbolic interactionism
- Voluntary association
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