Responding to the bitterness and tragedy of Vietnam, a group of Senators led by Jacob K. Javits of New York proposes fundamentally to change the constitutional relationship between President and Congress in the field of foreign affairs. They assert that the underlying cause of the Vietnam tragedy is a modem and most unconstitutional excess of presidential power—a shift in the rightful balance of authority between the two branches caused by presidential usurpations at least since the time of McKinley, and especially those they claim Lyndon B. Johnson made with regard to Vietnam. Ignoring their own repeated votes for Vietnam, these Senators say, We live in an age of undeclared war, which has meant Presidential war. Prolonged engagement in...
article published in law journalThe constitutional infirmity of the War Powers Resolution has been u...
On 2 August 1964, while patrolling in the Gulf of Tonkin, the U.S.S. Maddox was attacked by the Nort...
We live in an age of limited war Yet the legal structure for authorizing and overseeing war has fail...
Responding to the bitterness and tragedy of Vietnam, a group of Senators led by Jacob K. Javits of N...
For the past half century, Presidents have claimed constitutional authority to take the country from...
Several arguments have been advanced in support of the President\u27s authority to continue use of t...
The Vietnam war has convinced many persons that the president of the United States claims apparent...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
On almost every issue, our current national soul-searching leads us back to one crucial question who...
Almost without discussion, and essentially without opposition, the Framers and Ratifiers of the Unit...
Few areas of constitutional law have generated more controversy and debate as to the respective powe...
From the Vietnam War to the present, there has been a growing impression that federal courts lack bo...
For some time the international community has been keenly interested in the foreign uses to which Am...
The United States\u27 War on Terror lacks identifiable enemies and obvious front lines. It is fought...
The Cambodian incursion of April, 1970, brought forth renewed observations from constitutional schol...
article published in law journalThe constitutional infirmity of the War Powers Resolution has been u...
On 2 August 1964, while patrolling in the Gulf of Tonkin, the U.S.S. Maddox was attacked by the Nort...
We live in an age of limited war Yet the legal structure for authorizing and overseeing war has fail...
Responding to the bitterness and tragedy of Vietnam, a group of Senators led by Jacob K. Javits of N...
For the past half century, Presidents have claimed constitutional authority to take the country from...
Several arguments have been advanced in support of the President\u27s authority to continue use of t...
The Vietnam war has convinced many persons that the president of the United States claims apparent...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
On almost every issue, our current national soul-searching leads us back to one crucial question who...
Almost without discussion, and essentially without opposition, the Framers and Ratifiers of the Unit...
Few areas of constitutional law have generated more controversy and debate as to the respective powe...
From the Vietnam War to the present, there has been a growing impression that federal courts lack bo...
For some time the international community has been keenly interested in the foreign uses to which Am...
The United States\u27 War on Terror lacks identifiable enemies and obvious front lines. It is fought...
The Cambodian incursion of April, 1970, brought forth renewed observations from constitutional schol...
article published in law journalThe constitutional infirmity of the War Powers Resolution has been u...
On 2 August 1964, while patrolling in the Gulf of Tonkin, the U.S.S. Maddox was attacked by the Nort...
We live in an age of limited war Yet the legal structure for authorizing and overseeing war has fail...