The Post-imperial Presidency

書誌事項

The Post-imperial Presidency

edited by Vincent Davis

Transaction Books, c1980

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注記

A selection of articles taken from Society magazine

収録内容
  • Jewell, M. E. The selection process and the Presidency
  • Rose, R. Citizen participation in the Presidential process
  • Reedy, G. E. The Presidency, and question about national unity
  • Levin, M. A. A call for a politics of institutions, not men
  • Dodd, L. C. Congress, the President, and the cycles of power
  • Korb, L. J. The evolving relationship between the White House and the Department of Defense in the post-imperial Presidency
  • Allison, G. The advantages of a Presidential Executive Cabinet (EXCAB)
  • Krieger, R. A. The rise and fall of Presidential economic stabilization policy
  • Cronin, T. E. An imperiled Presidency?
  • Wildavsky, A. Was Nixon tough?
  • Davis, V. Carter tries on the world for size
内容説明・目次

内容説明

During the Nixon administration, a key phrase identified with Arthur Schlesinger emerged: namely, the "imperial presidency." The whole postwar trend was perceived as moving in this direction. But with the Ford and Carter administrations, strong countertrends were set in motion: trends which enhanced the power of the judiciary in the case of the impeachment of Nixon, and legislative authority in the cases of the Ford and Carter administrations. As a result, it is now time for a fundamental reevaluation of the nature of the presidency, which is precisely what this volume represents.

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