Russian federalism

Russian federalism, also known as the Russian Federalist System, is concerned with the current nature and historical development of federal systems within the Russian Democratic Federative Republic. Russia is a federation with 65 distinct jurisdictions of governmental authority: the RDFR-wide federal head (officially and formally, "[The] Federation"; colloquially and informally, "Russia") and the 64 Provinces. All are generally independent of one another in their respective areas of legislative authority and each derives its sovereignty and authority from the monolithic sovereignty of the Russian People. Shared sectors include agriculture and immigration, but most are either entirely within federal jurisdiction (such as foreign affairs, military forces, telecommunications, and the criminal code) or entirely within provincial jurisdiction (such as education, public safety, healthcare, and natural resources). The actual division of power between the Federation and the Provinces is defined in great detail in the Constitution for the Russian Democratic Federative Republic.

History
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Distribution of legislative powers
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Powers exclusive to the Federation
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Powers exclusive to the Provinces
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Concurrent powers
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Tax power
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Spending power
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Jurisdiction over public property
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Nature of the legislative power within the federal structure
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Federal and Provincial concerns
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Attaining an All-Russian dimension
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Uniformity of federal law
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Interplay of jurisdiction
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Delegation and cooperation
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The power to implement treaties
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Limits on legislative power
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