The subtitle of To Chain the Dog of War- The War Power of Congress in History and Law -accurately foretells both the virtues and vices of this study. The authors present a thoroughly-researched refutation of the theory that the President possesses an independent war-making authority under the United States Constitution. Their refutation is both historical and legal: historical in its reliance on the Framers\u27 intent in establishing a formal structure of congressional predominance, and legal in its strict allegiance to these formal structural rules. Unfortunately, the authors do not succeed in moving beyond this premise of a formal and, at least with respect to the eighteenth century, defensible structure of congressional ascendancy to ass...
For some time the international community has been keenly interested in the foreign uses to which Am...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
How parliaments and legislatures participate in war-making has raised interest among researchers fro...
This Response to Professor Ramsey\u27s pro-Congress view of the war powers debate presents a complet...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
This Article develops a theory of the constitutional allocation of the war power and applies it to t...
This dissertation examines how congressional deliberation over the constitutionality of a use of for...
and Joe Soss for their assistance and comments. Congress’s role in relation to presidential war powe...
This thesis is a study of the formulation of American foreign policy in general terms and specifical...
Almost without discussion, and essentially without opposition, the Framers and Ratifiers of the Unit...
For the past half century, Presidents have claimed constitutional authority to take the country from...
When crafting the United States Constitution, America’s Founders carefully prescribed an institution...
The U.S. Constitution vests the president with “executive power” and provides that “The President sh...
Contemporary debates over the appropriate allocation of war powers between the political branches ov...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
For some time the international community has been keenly interested in the foreign uses to which Am...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
How parliaments and legislatures participate in war-making has raised interest among researchers fro...
This Response to Professor Ramsey\u27s pro-Congress view of the war powers debate presents a complet...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
This Article develops a theory of the constitutional allocation of the war power and applies it to t...
This dissertation examines how congressional deliberation over the constitutionality of a use of for...
and Joe Soss for their assistance and comments. Congress’s role in relation to presidential war powe...
This thesis is a study of the formulation of American foreign policy in general terms and specifical...
Almost without discussion, and essentially without opposition, the Framers and Ratifiers of the Unit...
For the past half century, Presidents have claimed constitutional authority to take the country from...
When crafting the United States Constitution, America’s Founders carefully prescribed an institution...
The U.S. Constitution vests the president with “executive power” and provides that “The President sh...
Contemporary debates over the appropriate allocation of war powers between the political branches ov...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
For some time the international community has been keenly interested in the foreign uses to which Am...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
How parliaments and legislatures participate in war-making has raised interest among researchers fro...