International audienceThis volume offers a historical and documented account of the constitutional issues underlying President Abraham Lincoln’s determination to save the Union between 1861 and 1865. It provides a precise approach to the complex power game between the three branches of the federal government. While both the Civil War and the Emancipation issue are present across the different chapters, the book focuses on constitutional issues to provide a clear analysis of the way Lincoln used or misused the US Constitution in a context of emergency
This book vividly depicts and clearly explains the events in the decades leading up to the Civil War...
The decision of the United States Supreme Court in the Prize Cases in 1863, was the first that conce...
The first signature of the book, issued as a separate, and used as a propectus.https://scholarsjunct...
On the afternoon of January 1,1863, following nearly two years of bloody civil war, Abraham Lincoln ...
Dr. Huebner speaks on the way that Lincoln struggled with, and found ways to surmount, three major c...
Conflict in the U.S. constitutional system is not an error but a feature. The structural sparring be...
By conferring on the President the title of commander in chief, the Constitution created an awkwar...
"Long before the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln recognized the challenge American slavery posed to the i...
The tension between Hobbesian and Lockeian perspectives on the origins and functions of the state wa...
The clashes between President Abraham Lincoln and Chief Justice Roger B. Taney over slavery, secessi...
Trekking through the Cloudy Questions of Wartime Constitutionalism Mark E. Neely, Jr’s latest book, ...
How could a country founded on the belief that “all men are created equal” tolerate slavery? Was the...
This essay explores the paradoxical circumstances of emancipation and constitutional reform during t...
Accompanied by "Appendix [to] part III, Lincoln and Grant on the Jew quesiton in the civil war; orig...
Like most abolitionists, Lincoln denounced slavery as an unmitigated moral evil that violated the fo...
This book vividly depicts and clearly explains the events in the decades leading up to the Civil War...
The decision of the United States Supreme Court in the Prize Cases in 1863, was the first that conce...
The first signature of the book, issued as a separate, and used as a propectus.https://scholarsjunct...
On the afternoon of January 1,1863, following nearly two years of bloody civil war, Abraham Lincoln ...
Dr. Huebner speaks on the way that Lincoln struggled with, and found ways to surmount, three major c...
Conflict in the U.S. constitutional system is not an error but a feature. The structural sparring be...
By conferring on the President the title of commander in chief, the Constitution created an awkwar...
"Long before the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln recognized the challenge American slavery posed to the i...
The tension between Hobbesian and Lockeian perspectives on the origins and functions of the state wa...
The clashes between President Abraham Lincoln and Chief Justice Roger B. Taney over slavery, secessi...
Trekking through the Cloudy Questions of Wartime Constitutionalism Mark E. Neely, Jr’s latest book, ...
How could a country founded on the belief that “all men are created equal” tolerate slavery? Was the...
This essay explores the paradoxical circumstances of emancipation and constitutional reform during t...
Accompanied by "Appendix [to] part III, Lincoln and Grant on the Jew quesiton in the civil war; orig...
Like most abolitionists, Lincoln denounced slavery as an unmitigated moral evil that violated the fo...
This book vividly depicts and clearly explains the events in the decades leading up to the Civil War...
The decision of the United States Supreme Court in the Prize Cases in 1863, was the first that conce...
The first signature of the book, issued as a separate, and used as a propectus.https://scholarsjunct...