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Resources for Public Speaking: Differences Between Federal and State Courts

As a product of the federalist structure established by the Constitution, the United States has a national judiciary as well as a separate judicial system for each state. While the state and federal judiciaries overlap in the kinds of cases they hear, the laws they apply, and the geographical areas over which they have jurisdiction, there are important differences between the systems as well. This resource provides suggested talking points, in outline form, for those wishing to speak about differences between federal and state courts.

In addition to the outline, the resource contains Topic at a Glance, a brief summary in PDF format; a gallery of downloadable images for use in a PowerPoint presentation; links to related resources on the FJC’s History of the Federal Judiciary website; a further reading list; and excerpts of historical documents that could be handed out to audience members or incorporated into a presentation. The entire resource is available in PDF format as well.

Download PDFs: Federal-State Differences-Topic at a Glance.pdf (322.77 KB) Federal-State Differences-Full Unit.pdf (1.09 MB)