In a unitary system, the central government is sovereign – it is the ultimate governing authority, with no legal superior. It can create other governments (regional governments) and delegate powers and responsibilities to them. The central government in a unitary system can also unilaterally take away any responsibilities it has delegated to any regional governments it creates and can even eliminate the regional governments.
In a confederal system, several independent sovereign governments (such as the thirteen state governments in the American case) agree to cooperate on specified matters while each retains ultimate authority over all other governmental matters within its borders. The cooperating sovereign governments delegate some …show more content…
Such dual sovereignty does not exist in unitary and confederal systems, where sovereignty is held by one level of government. The State government is responsible for things like marriage, marijuana, abortion. The state can also delegate responsibility to the local government in a unitary system type fashion based on the state’s constitution.
Intergovernmental Relations (IGR)- When a teacher is trained by the state, and works for the school district, which follows rules in place by the state’s constitution for the school curricula. Some things like police officers are employed by state, local, and federal governments.
Living in a federal system of government, your legal rights and liberties and civic responsibilities vary depending on where you live. The majority of U.S. citizens life under 5 governments: National, State, County (called borough in Alaska and parish in Louisiana), municipal or township, and school district. Each can tax you and place different rules on