The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or tension. The Constitution grants Congress the power to declare war, to raise and support armies, to provide and maintain a navy, and to make rules for the regulation of those armed forces. The President, on the other hand, is the Commander in Chief of U.S. armed forces. Most scholars agree that the framers sought to strike a balance: the President alone could not commence war, but he could use force to repel sudden attacks on the United States or its armed forces. Reacting against the unilateral power of kings to go to war without the consent of the people, the framers desired a democratic check on the power of the President to initiate arm...
When crafting the United States Constitution, America’s Founders carefully prescribed an institution...
Before the United States Constitution was ratified there was much debate about what war powers the e...
In light of the history of the United States Constitution and the continued expansion of Presidentia...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
I examine the interactions between a president and members of Congress during foreign policy crises ...
Existing war powers scholarship focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u27s power to initiate milit...
This Response to Professor Ramsey\u27s pro-Congress view of the war powers debate presents a complet...
In recent history, the authority to commit US. troops to theaters of conflict has shifted from Congr...
Almost without discussion, and essentially without opposition, the Framers and Ratifiers of the Unit...
The Cambodian incursion of April, 1970, brought forth renewed observations from constitutional schol...
With the Cold War over, Americans have grown more introspective about the role of the United States ...
This Article develops a theory of the constitutional allocation of the war power and applies it to t...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
The struggle between the President and the Congress over the power to control the use of military fo...
Journal ArticleThe United States Congress enacted the War Powers Resolution to restore its constitut...
When crafting the United States Constitution, America’s Founders carefully prescribed an institution...
Before the United States Constitution was ratified there was much debate about what war powers the e...
In light of the history of the United States Constitution and the continued expansion of Presidentia...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
I examine the interactions between a president and members of Congress during foreign policy crises ...
Existing war powers scholarship focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u27s power to initiate milit...
This Response to Professor Ramsey\u27s pro-Congress view of the war powers debate presents a complet...
In recent history, the authority to commit US. troops to theaters of conflict has shifted from Congr...
Almost without discussion, and essentially without opposition, the Framers and Ratifiers of the Unit...
The Cambodian incursion of April, 1970, brought forth renewed observations from constitutional schol...
With the Cold War over, Americans have grown more introspective about the role of the United States ...
This Article develops a theory of the constitutional allocation of the war power and applies it to t...
The Constitution divides the war powers between Congress, which declares war, and the President, who...
The struggle between the President and the Congress over the power to control the use of military fo...
Journal ArticleThe United States Congress enacted the War Powers Resolution to restore its constitut...
When crafting the United States Constitution, America’s Founders carefully prescribed an institution...
Before the United States Constitution was ratified there was much debate about what war powers the e...
In light of the history of the United States Constitution and the continued expansion of Presidentia...