Anyone wishing to argue that the War Powers Resolution of 1973 is unconstitutional must be prepared to explain the purpose of article I, section 8, clause 11, of the Constitution. That provision expressly grants to Congress the power To declare War. If the President of the United States is free to fight a war whether or not one has been declared, then this apparently unambiguous constitutional provision is devoid of significance. Opponents of the War Powers Resolution have traditionally claimed that clause 11 confers upon Congress only a narrow piece of war power. Defenders of the Resolution have argued in contrast that the Resolution constitutes an exercise of congressional authority under the clause. This last contention pokes at the t...
The Constitution clearly defines the powers that Congress and the President are to share concerning ...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
The power to declare war or to authorize warfare by the United States, and to regulate the use of fu...
Anyone wishing to argue that the War Powers Resolution of 1973 is unconstitutional must be prepared ...
This Response to Professor Ramsey\u27s pro-Congress view of the war powers debate presents a complet...
This Article develops a theory of the constitutional allocation of the war power and applies it to t...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
Almost without discussion, and essentially without opposition, the Framers and Ratifiers of the Unit...
In 1973, Congress enacted the War Powers Resolution.\u27 The purpose of the Resolution was to fulfi...
article published in law journalThe constitutional infirmity of the War Powers Resolution has been u...
The executive and legislative branches of government have struggled over control of the war powers s...
This paper is a lightly-footnoted and modestly expanded version of my presentation at the Georgetown...
We live in an age of limited war. Yet the legal structure for authorizing and overseeing war has fai...
When the Executive\u27s use of the war powers infringes on individual liberties and resulting cases ...
The text of the U.S. Constitution is the source of the controversies between two branches of America...
The Constitution clearly defines the powers that Congress and the President are to share concerning ...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
The power to declare war or to authorize warfare by the United States, and to regulate the use of fu...
Anyone wishing to argue that the War Powers Resolution of 1973 is unconstitutional must be prepared ...
This Response to Professor Ramsey\u27s pro-Congress view of the war powers debate presents a complet...
This Article develops a theory of the constitutional allocation of the war power and applies it to t...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
Almost without discussion, and essentially without opposition, the Framers and Ratifiers of the Unit...
In 1973, Congress enacted the War Powers Resolution.\u27 The purpose of the Resolution was to fulfi...
article published in law journalThe constitutional infirmity of the War Powers Resolution has been u...
The executive and legislative branches of government have struggled over control of the war powers s...
This paper is a lightly-footnoted and modestly expanded version of my presentation at the Georgetown...
We live in an age of limited war. Yet the legal structure for authorizing and overseeing war has fai...
When the Executive\u27s use of the war powers infringes on individual liberties and resulting cases ...
The text of the U.S. Constitution is the source of the controversies between two branches of America...
The Constitution clearly defines the powers that Congress and the President are to share concerning ...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
The power to declare war or to authorize warfare by the United States, and to regulate the use of fu...