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This chapter considers the impact of expanding national power and the configuration of the federal government’s constitutional power in the exercise of the police power by state governments. It considers (and rejects) the claim of a national police power. It proceeds to discuss the ways in which the nature and scope of the police power does contribute to a dynamic federalism, thereby augmenting not supplanting federal power, all in the service of a successful and basically progressive approach to regulation and regulatory power generally.
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