(Excerpt) Though best known for leading Britain during World War II, Winston Churchill was a keen observer of constitutional law. Most of his insights concerned the unwritten conventions of the British Constitution, but Churchill also commented extensively on the American Constitution. Intellectual curiosity and a desire to forge a closer alliance between Great Britain and the United States were at the root of Churchill’s interest in the institutions of what he called “The Great Republic.” As with all things Churchill, his observations on our Constitution were sometimes inspiring, sometimes illuminating, and sometimes noxious. This Article provides the first comprehensive analysis of Winston Churchill’s views on American constitutional law....
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Twentieth ...
The place of the Constitution in American life nowhere appears more clearly than in the form of our ...
The telephone rang, and a familiar conversation began: since 1989, the State Department had been bad...
(Excerpt) Though best known for leading Britain during World War II, Winston Churchill was a keen ob...
Churchill believed in the existence of a specific political tradition of the English-speaking people...
Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin Roosevelt inspired the Allies with memorable...
The 1930s marked Winston Churchill as an exile from his party and the political circles of England. ...
Given Winston Churchill’s influence and achievement as a writer, historian, adventurer, soldier, art...
Given Winston Churchill’s influence and achievement as a writer, historian, adventurer, soldier, art...
America is a world power, but does it have the strength to understand itself? Is it content, even no...
This brochure lists selected items from the Winston Churchill Collection built by E. Conyers O\u27Br...
The Constitutional Convention of 1787 forged a new nation, but it’s only recently that the full pict...
This article discusses the Constitution of the United Kingdom and then draws some comparisons betwee...
Churchill is often deemed to have failed at Fulton in delivering ‘the crux’ of what he came to secur...
Bruce Ackerman is the Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science at Yale University. This essay...
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Twentieth ...
The place of the Constitution in American life nowhere appears more clearly than in the form of our ...
The telephone rang, and a familiar conversation began: since 1989, the State Department had been bad...
(Excerpt) Though best known for leading Britain during World War II, Winston Churchill was a keen ob...
Churchill believed in the existence of a specific political tradition of the English-speaking people...
Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin Roosevelt inspired the Allies with memorable...
The 1930s marked Winston Churchill as an exile from his party and the political circles of England. ...
Given Winston Churchill’s influence and achievement as a writer, historian, adventurer, soldier, art...
Given Winston Churchill’s influence and achievement as a writer, historian, adventurer, soldier, art...
America is a world power, but does it have the strength to understand itself? Is it content, even no...
This brochure lists selected items from the Winston Churchill Collection built by E. Conyers O\u27Br...
The Constitutional Convention of 1787 forged a new nation, but it’s only recently that the full pict...
This article discusses the Constitution of the United Kingdom and then draws some comparisons betwee...
Churchill is often deemed to have failed at Fulton in delivering ‘the crux’ of what he came to secur...
Bruce Ackerman is the Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science at Yale University. This essay...
This is a pre-copy-editing, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Twentieth ...
The place of the Constitution in American life nowhere appears more clearly than in the form of our ...
The telephone rang, and a familiar conversation began: since 1989, the State Department had been bad...