The article explores the nature of a formally declared war and will argue that the difference between war and not war is the degree to which the executive branch is given power by the U.S. Congress to manipulate the domestic arena with acts of a legislative nature as a means of prosecuting a conflict. It concludes that in an undefined war, ardent caution should be exercised when handing the legislative reins to the executive branch in pursuit of victory
Courts frequently dismiss claims against the Executive’s use of the war power as being non-justiciab...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
While the Constitution of the United States created a system of separation of powers and checks and ...
The article explores the nature of a formally declared war and will argue that the d...
This Essay, written as a response to a pro-Congress view in the war powers debate, presents a comple...
This Article explores the eighteenth-century use of the phrase declare war, with the goal of shedd...
What are the President’s war-making powers? This essay, a brief reply to an article by Curtis Bradle...
Drawing the line between congressional and presidential war powers has been a popular and controvers...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
The U.S. Constitution vests the president with “executive power” and provides that “The President sh...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
The Bush Administration has asserted broad executive powers to conduct the War on T...
How parliaments and legislatures participate in war-making has raised interest among researchers fro...
The Senate Judiciary Committee convened to determine which branch of the American government, execut...
The United States\u27 War on Terror lacks identifiable enemies and obvious front lines. It is fought...
Courts frequently dismiss claims against the Executive’s use of the war power as being non-justiciab...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
While the Constitution of the United States created a system of separation of powers and checks and ...
The article explores the nature of a formally declared war and will argue that the d...
This Essay, written as a response to a pro-Congress view in the war powers debate, presents a comple...
This Article explores the eighteenth-century use of the phrase declare war, with the goal of shedd...
What are the President’s war-making powers? This essay, a brief reply to an article by Curtis Bradle...
Drawing the line between congressional and presidential war powers has been a popular and controvers...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
The U.S. Constitution vests the president with “executive power” and provides that “The President sh...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
The Bush Administration has asserted broad executive powers to conduct the War on T...
How parliaments and legislatures participate in war-making has raised interest among researchers fro...
The Senate Judiciary Committee convened to determine which branch of the American government, execut...
The United States\u27 War on Terror lacks identifiable enemies and obvious front lines. It is fought...
Courts frequently dismiss claims against the Executive’s use of the war power as being non-justiciab...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
While the Constitution of the United States created a system of separation of powers and checks and ...