US presidents have expanded executive power in times of war and emergency,sometimes aggressively so. This article builds on the application of punctuated equilibria theory by Burnham (1999 and Ackerman (1999). Underpinning this theory is the notion that rapid changes in - or external shocks to - domestic and international society impose new and insistent demands on the state. In so doing, they produce important and decisive moments of institutional mobilization and creativity, disrupt a pre-existing, relatively stable, equilibrium between the Congress and the president, and precipitate decisions or nondecisions by the electorate and political leaders that define the contours for action when the next crisis or external shock occurs. The arti...
The article contextualizes the United States (US) counter-terrorism policies from 2001 to the presen...
This paper represents an in-depth examination of Separation of Power issues raised in the context of...
What are the President’s war-making powers? This essay, a brief reply to an article by Curtis Bradle...
U.S. presidents have expanded executive power in times of war and emergency, sometimes aggressively ...
Constitutions - codified or unwritten - institutionalise and actually constitute specific equilibria...
Congressional dominance theory holds that not only can the US Congress control the executive, it doe...
Congressional dominance theory holds that not only can the US Congress control the executive, it doe...
Constitutions – codified or unwritten – institutionalise and actually constitute specific equilibria...
The United States\u27 War on Terror lacks identifiable enemies and obvious front lines. It is fought...
Immediately after the attacks on the United States of September 11, 2001, President George W. Bush c...
The subjects of this thesis are the war powers of the U.S. President. The main theory of this work i...
Executive branch officials rest the President’s authority in today’s war against ISIS, al Qaeda, and...
While the Constitution of the United States created a system of separation of powers and checks and ...
For the past half century, Presidents have claimed constitutional authority to take the country from...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
The article contextualizes the United States (US) counter-terrorism policies from 2001 to the presen...
This paper represents an in-depth examination of Separation of Power issues raised in the context of...
What are the President’s war-making powers? This essay, a brief reply to an article by Curtis Bradle...
U.S. presidents have expanded executive power in times of war and emergency, sometimes aggressively ...
Constitutions - codified or unwritten - institutionalise and actually constitute specific equilibria...
Congressional dominance theory holds that not only can the US Congress control the executive, it doe...
Congressional dominance theory holds that not only can the US Congress control the executive, it doe...
Constitutions – codified or unwritten – institutionalise and actually constitute specific equilibria...
The United States\u27 War on Terror lacks identifiable enemies and obvious front lines. It is fought...
Immediately after the attacks on the United States of September 11, 2001, President George W. Bush c...
The subjects of this thesis are the war powers of the U.S. President. The main theory of this work i...
Executive branch officials rest the President’s authority in today’s war against ISIS, al Qaeda, and...
While the Constitution of the United States created a system of separation of powers and checks and ...
For the past half century, Presidents have claimed constitutional authority to take the country from...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
The article contextualizes the United States (US) counter-terrorism policies from 2001 to the presen...
This paper represents an in-depth examination of Separation of Power issues raised in the context of...
What are the President’s war-making powers? This essay, a brief reply to an article by Curtis Bradle...