Book review: The President\u27s authority over foreign affairs: an essay in constitutional interpretation. By H. Jefferson Powell. Carolina Academic Press. 2002. Pp. ix, 165. Reviewed by: Daniel A. Farbe
In evaluating whether presidential acts are constitutional, the Supreme Court often takes its cues f...
Foreign Policy by Congress. By Thomas M. Franck and Edward Weisband, New York and Oxford: Oxford Uni...
A model of institutional rational choice is presented to describe the actual practice of the separat...
Book review: The President\u27s authority over foreign affairs: an essay in constitutional interpret...
Jefferson Powell is one of our foremost scholars of constitutional history. He is particularly adept...
American constitutional historians and jurists have debated for decades what to make of the Constitu...
FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND THE CONSTITUTION By Louis Henkin Mineola, New York: Foundation Press, 1972. Pp. ...
The aim of the first section is to examine the judiciary\u27s contribution to executive hegemony in ...
The Framers did not intend the Constitution to be an all-inclusive bill of lading, for we cannot f...
In the US constitutional system, the president generally conducts foreign relations. But not always....
The President claims exclusive control over diplomacy within our constitutional system. Relying on t...
Longstanding debates over the allocation of foreign affairs power between Congress and the President...
This volume presents a crusade in the name of democracy against the constitutional provision that th...
Symposium: War, Terrorism and Torture: Limits on Presidential Power in the 21st Century. Convened by...
Essays in constitutional law are often about something more than the historical texts at hand. Profe...
In evaluating whether presidential acts are constitutional, the Supreme Court often takes its cues f...
Foreign Policy by Congress. By Thomas M. Franck and Edward Weisband, New York and Oxford: Oxford Uni...
A model of institutional rational choice is presented to describe the actual practice of the separat...
Book review: The President\u27s authority over foreign affairs: an essay in constitutional interpret...
Jefferson Powell is one of our foremost scholars of constitutional history. He is particularly adept...
American constitutional historians and jurists have debated for decades what to make of the Constitu...
FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND THE CONSTITUTION By Louis Henkin Mineola, New York: Foundation Press, 1972. Pp. ...
The aim of the first section is to examine the judiciary\u27s contribution to executive hegemony in ...
The Framers did not intend the Constitution to be an all-inclusive bill of lading, for we cannot f...
In the US constitutional system, the president generally conducts foreign relations. But not always....
The President claims exclusive control over diplomacy within our constitutional system. Relying on t...
Longstanding debates over the allocation of foreign affairs power between Congress and the President...
This volume presents a crusade in the name of democracy against the constitutional provision that th...
Symposium: War, Terrorism and Torture: Limits on Presidential Power in the 21st Century. Convened by...
Essays in constitutional law are often about something more than the historical texts at hand. Profe...
In evaluating whether presidential acts are constitutional, the Supreme Court often takes its cues f...
Foreign Policy by Congress. By Thomas M. Franck and Edward Weisband, New York and Oxford: Oxford Uni...
A model of institutional rational choice is presented to describe the actual practice of the separat...