78,464 research outputs found
State Public-Law Litigation in an Age of Polarization
Public-law litigation by state governments plays an increasingly prominent role in American governance. Although public lawsuits by state governments designed to challenge the validity or shape the content of national policy are not new, such suits have increased in number and salience over the last few decades — especially since the tobacco litigation of the late 1990s. Under the Obama and Trump Administrations, such suits have taken on a particularly partisan cast; “red” states have challenged the Affordable Care Act and President Obama’s immigration orders, for example, and “blue” states have challenged President Trump’s travel bans and attempts to roll back prior environmental policies. As a result, longstanding concerns about state litigation as a form of national policymaking that circumvents ordinary lawmaking processes have been joined by new concerns that state litigation reflects and aggravates partisan polarization.
This Article explores the relationship between state litigation and the polarization of American politics. As we explain, our federal system can mitigate the effects of partisan polarization by taking some divisive issues off the national agenda, leaving them to be solved in state jurisdictions where consensus may be more attainable — both because polarization appears to be dampened at the state level, and because political preferences are unevenly distributed geographically. State litigation can both help and hinder this dynamic. The available evidence suggests that state attorneys general (who handle the lion’s share of state litigation) are themselves fairly polarized, as are certain categories of state litigation. We map out the different ways states can use litigation to shape national policy, linking each to concerns about polarization. We thus distinguish between “vertical” conflicts, in which states sue to preserve their autonomy to go their own way on divisive issues, and “horizontal” conflicts, in which different groups of states vie for control of national policy. The latter, we think, will tend to aggravate polarization. But we concede — and illustrate — that it will often be difficult to separate out the vertical and horizontal aspects of particular disputes, and that in some horizontal disputes the polarization costs of state litigation may be worth paying.
We argue, moreover, that state litigation cannot be understood in a vacuum, but must be assessed as part of a broader phenomenon in American law: our reliance on entrepreneurial litigation to develop and enforce public norms. In this context, state attorneys general often play roles similar to “private attorneys general” such as class action lawyers or public interest organizations. And states, with their built-in systems of democratic accountability and internal checks and balances, compare well with other entrepreneurial enforcement vehicles in a number of respects. Nevertheless, state litigation efforts may not always account well for divergent preferences and interests within the broad publics that the states represent, and this deficiency becomes particularly important in politically polarized times. Although our account of state litigation is, on the whole, a positive one, we caution that state attorneys general face a significant risk of backlash by other political actors, and by courts, if state litigation is (or is perceived to be) a bitterly partisan affair
On the miscible Rayleigh-Taylor instability: two and three dimensions
We investigate the miscible Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instability in both 2 and 3
dimensions using direct numerical simulations, where the working fluid is
assumed incompressible under the Boussinesq approximation. We first consider
the case of randomly perturbed interfaces. With a variety of diagnostics, we
develop a physical picture for the detailed temporal development of the mixed
layer: We identify three distinct evolutionary phases in the development of the
mixed layer, which can be related to detailed variations in the growth of the
mixing zone. Our analysis provides an explanation for the observed differences
between two and three-dimensional RT instability; the analysis also leads us to
concentrate on the RT models which (1) work equally well for both laminar and
turbulent flows, and (2) do not depend on turbulent scaling within the mixing
layer between fluids. These candidate RT models are based on point sources
within bubbles (or plumes) and interaction with each other (or the background
flow). With this motivation, we examine the evolution of single plumes, and
relate our numerical results (of single plumes) to a simple analytical model
for plume evolution.Comment: 31 pages, 27 figures, to appear in November issue of JFM, 2001. For
better figures: http://astro.uchicago.edu/~young/ps/jfmtry08.ps.
The results of a wind tunnel investigation of a model rotor with a free tip
The results of a wind-tunnel test of the free tip rotor are presented. The free tip extended over the outer 10% of the rotor blade and included a simple, passive controller mechanism. Wind-tunnel test hardware is described. The free-tip assembly, which includes the controller, functioned flawlessly throughout the test. The tip pitched freely and responded to airflow perturbation in a sharp, quick, and stable manner. Tip pitch-angle responses are presented for an advance ratio range of 0.1 to 0.397 and for a thrust coefficient range of 0.038 to 0.092. The free tip reduced power requirements, loads going into the control system, and some flatwise blade-bending moments. Chordwise loads were not reduced by the free tip
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