This Essay offers a brief and highly speculative political, intellectual, and legal history of the theory of the unitary executive in the late twentieth century. I suggest that that theory developed in three stages, which I label the weak, the strong, and the super-strong versions, and confronted one alternative that superficially resembled the theory of the unitary executive but that actually served quite different political, intellectual, and legal purposes. Further, I suggest that the second stage followed the first and the third the second: The weak version was articulated on the arrival of the Reagan administration in 1981, the strong version during the late Reagan and Bush I administrations, and the super-strong version during the Bus...
This paper examines the unitary executive theory\u27s growth and implications for the modern preside...
Book review: The Unitary Executive: Presidential Power from Washington to Bush. Steven G. Calabresi ...
The American version of the separation of powers was designed to prevent tyranny (i.e., capricious, ...
The movement toward President-centered government is one of the most significant trends in modern Am...
Post-9/11 American politics has seen an unprecedented rise in presidential power and what has come t...
This Essay outlines part of a larger project on executive power. Like that larger work, these remark...
Recent Supreme Court decisions and the impeachment of President Clinton has reinvigorated the debate...
Since the impeachment of President Clinton, there has been renewed debate over whether Congress can ...
It is a bracingly simple idea. Article II, section 1 of the U.S. Constitution vests the executive po...
This paper will argue that beginning with President Reagan the adoption of unitary theory as a centr...
Central to the recent argument from the "unitary executive" is the claim that the unitary executive ...
Recent Supreme Court decisions and political events have reinvigorated the debate over Congress\u27s...
The debate over the unitary executive theory—the theory that the President should have sole control ...
Recent Supreme Court decisions and the impeachment of President Clinton has reinvigorated the debate...
Calabresi and Yoo make three important contributions to the literature on separation of powers in th...
This paper examines the unitary executive theory\u27s growth and implications for the modern preside...
Book review: The Unitary Executive: Presidential Power from Washington to Bush. Steven G. Calabresi ...
The American version of the separation of powers was designed to prevent tyranny (i.e., capricious, ...
The movement toward President-centered government is one of the most significant trends in modern Am...
Post-9/11 American politics has seen an unprecedented rise in presidential power and what has come t...
This Essay outlines part of a larger project on executive power. Like that larger work, these remark...
Recent Supreme Court decisions and the impeachment of President Clinton has reinvigorated the debate...
Since the impeachment of President Clinton, there has been renewed debate over whether Congress can ...
It is a bracingly simple idea. Article II, section 1 of the U.S. Constitution vests the executive po...
This paper will argue that beginning with President Reagan the adoption of unitary theory as a centr...
Central to the recent argument from the "unitary executive" is the claim that the unitary executive ...
Recent Supreme Court decisions and political events have reinvigorated the debate over Congress\u27s...
The debate over the unitary executive theory—the theory that the President should have sole control ...
Recent Supreme Court decisions and the impeachment of President Clinton has reinvigorated the debate...
Calabresi and Yoo make three important contributions to the literature on separation of powers in th...
This paper examines the unitary executive theory\u27s growth and implications for the modern preside...
Book review: The Unitary Executive: Presidential Power from Washington to Bush. Steven G. Calabresi ...
The American version of the separation of powers was designed to prevent tyranny (i.e., capricious, ...