American government operates through constant collaboration between federal, state, and local levels to deliver services and solve shared challenges. Intergovernmental cooperation enables these entities to share resources, coordinate efforts, and address issues that span jurisdictions, from public safety to infrastructure.
Federal-State-Local Partnerships
Federal agencies work with states and localities on critical tasks like hunting dangerous fugitives and catching criminals across borders. This extends to everyday essentials, such as why your driver’s license works in all 50 states. Explore how America’s governments work together through grants and mandates.
Local and Regional Collaboration
Cities and counties team up or go it alone based on efficiency needs, often using joint powers authorities versus single-agency provision. Regional entities like MPOs versus regional authorities shape planning, supported by interlocal agreements.
Funding, Learning, and Challenges
Federal discretionary, formula, block, and pass-through grants drive cooperation, though federal actions can drive up costs for states and cities. Governments spread ideas via policy transfer versus learning and policy diffusion and convergence.
When most Americans think about government, they picture Washington D.C., their state capital, or city hall as separate entities. But…
Most Americans deal with their local governments far more than they interact with Washington. From getting driver's licenses to paying…
Every day, millions of Americans commute on roads, ride buses and trains, turn on water taps, and work in jobs…
Federal grants are a cornerstone of how the U.S. government implements policy, delivers public services, and stimulates economic activity. These…