The imperial presidency and the constitution
著者
書誌事項
The imperial presidency and the constitution
Rowman & Littlefield, c2017
- : cloth
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Time and again, in recent years, the charge has been made that sitting presidents have behaved "imperially," employing authorities that break the bounds of law and the Constitution. It is now an epithet used to describe presidencies of both parties. The Imperial Presidency and the Constitution examines this critical issue from a variety of perspectives: analyzing the president's role in the administrative state, as commander-in-chief, as occupant of the modern "Bully Pulpit," and, in separate essays, addressing recent presidents' relationship with Congress and the Supreme Court. The volume also deepens the discussion by taking a look back at Abraham Lincoln's expansive use of executive power during the Civil War where the tension between law and necessity were at their most extreme, calling into question the "rule of law" itself. The volume concludes with an examination of how the Constitution's provision of both "powers and duties" for the president can provide a roadmap for assessing the propriety of executive behavior.
目次
Introduction, Andrew E. Busch
Chapter 1: Lincoln: An Imperial President?, David K. Nichols
Chapter 2: The Administrative State and the Imperial Presidency: Then and Now, Adam J. White Chapter 3: Constitutional Structure, Political History, And the Invisible Congress, Andrew Rudalevige
Chapter 4: Can the Supreme Court Check Abuses of Executive Power?, Ralph A. Rossum
Chapter 5: Going to War: The Constitutional and Strategic Roots of the Imperial Presidency, Gary J. Schmitt
Chapter 6: The Presidency and the New 'Bully Pulpit', James W. Ceaser
Chapter 7: The Imperial Executive in Constitutional Democracy: Exploring the Powers-Duties Distinction, Joseph M. Bessette
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Index
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