Judicial Federalism (Theory, Structures & Constitutional Practice) examines how judicial authority is structured and exercised within federal systems to maintain constitutional balance and uphold the rule of law.
The session explores the role of the judiciary in interpreting constitutions, resolving disputes between federal and subnational governments, protecting minority rights, and preventing central domination. It analyzes different structural models of judicial federalism including single court systems, dual court systems, integrated systems, and single-integrated systems with comparative examples from the United States of America, Germany, India, Australia, South Africa, and Malaysia.
The training provides both theoretical foundations and practical insights into court hierarchies, judicial review, constitutional supremacy, and federal-state legal relations highlighting why judicial federalism is essential for sustaining democratic governance.



