In the US constitutional system, the president generally conducts foreign relations. But not always. In recent years, the courts and Congress have repeatedly taken steps to interact directly with foreign governments. Nonexecutive conduct of foreign relations occurs when the courts or Congress engage in or take actions that result in the opening of a direct channel of official communications between the US nonexecutive branch and a foreign executive branch. Nonexecutive conduct of foreign relations raises serious constitutional questions, but to date there is no clear rubric for analyzing the constitutionality of the judiciary’s or Congress’s actions. Moreover, nonexecutive conduct of foreign relations is likely to become more frequent due t...
This essay reviews Professor Martin Flaherty’s outstanding and engaging recent book Restoring the Gl...
In evaluating whether presidential acts are constitutional, the Supreme Court often takes its cues f...
On February 23 of this year, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals invalidated a California statute per...
In the US constitutional system, the president generally conducts foreign relations. But not always....
The aim of the first section is to examine the judiciary\u27s contribution to executive hegemony in ...
This Note will argue that federal courts need to be more “disciplined” in their deference determinat...
Fifty years after it was handed down, the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Youngstown Sheet \u26 Tube ...
Few substantive areas have merited as little empirical scrutiny as the Supreme Court's decision...
For much of this century, American foreign affairs law has assumed that there is a sharp distinction...
How should courts handle cases that implicate foreign relations or national security? What weight sh...
A recurring debate in foreign affairs law focuses on the appropriate level of congressional and judi...
In 1976, Congress set out to remedy the haphazard and politically influenced system by which foreign...
This article analyzes the power of the President to create federal law on the foundation of the exec...
American constitutional historians and jurists have debated for decades what to make of the Constitu...
A traditional view in legal scholarship holds that the Constitution assigns to the President an excl...
This essay reviews Professor Martin Flaherty’s outstanding and engaging recent book Restoring the Gl...
In evaluating whether presidential acts are constitutional, the Supreme Court often takes its cues f...
On February 23 of this year, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals invalidated a California statute per...
In the US constitutional system, the president generally conducts foreign relations. But not always....
The aim of the first section is to examine the judiciary\u27s contribution to executive hegemony in ...
This Note will argue that federal courts need to be more “disciplined” in their deference determinat...
Fifty years after it was handed down, the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Youngstown Sheet \u26 Tube ...
Few substantive areas have merited as little empirical scrutiny as the Supreme Court's decision...
For much of this century, American foreign affairs law has assumed that there is a sharp distinction...
How should courts handle cases that implicate foreign relations or national security? What weight sh...
A recurring debate in foreign affairs law focuses on the appropriate level of congressional and judi...
In 1976, Congress set out to remedy the haphazard and politically influenced system by which foreign...
This article analyzes the power of the President to create federal law on the foundation of the exec...
American constitutional historians and jurists have debated for decades what to make of the Constitu...
A traditional view in legal scholarship holds that the Constitution assigns to the President an excl...
This essay reviews Professor Martin Flaherty’s outstanding and engaging recent book Restoring the Gl...
In evaluating whether presidential acts are constitutional, the Supreme Court often takes its cues f...
On February 23 of this year, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals invalidated a California statute per...