When in December of 1978, President Carter announced his decision to give the one-year notice terminating the 1954 Mutual Defense Treaty with the Republic of China (Taiwan), he precipitated a constitutional debate of considerable importance. At issue was whether the President acted properly in terminating the treaty on his own initiative. More sharply than any similar debate in recent years, the discussion brought into focus the entirely different and conflicting approaches that have tended to dominate discourse between the Executive. and Congress concerning their respective constitutional responsibilities for foreign policy. The debate pointedly demonstrated the lack of intellectual imagination in both approaches
The Framers did not intend the Constitution to be an all-inclusive bill of lading, for we cannot f...
A model of institutional rational choice is presented to describe the actual practice of the separat...
Although lame-duck Presidents frequently push through partisan domestic laws and policies during the...
On December 13, 1979, the Supreme Court vacated and dismissed, on political question and ripeness gr...
The purpose of this Comment is to illustrate a theory of political question jurisprudence which woul...
On December 15, 1979, President Carter announced his intention to recognize and establish diplomatic...
All four articles in this issue of Yale Studies in World Public Order concern an episode of singular...
The act of terminating a treaty may initiate an international embroglio or create international arra...
This Note explores the legal issues surrounding a president\u27s legal authority to unilaterally wit...
The termination of U.S. treaties provides an especially rich example of how governmental practices c...
Foreign Policy by Congress. By Thomas M. Franck and Edward Weisband, New York and Oxford: Oxford Uni...
Foreign Policy by Congress. By Thomas M. Franck and Edward Weisband, New York and Oxford: Oxford Uni...
The President of the United States frequently signs international agreements but postpones ratificat...
The aim of the first section is to examine the judiciary\u27s contribution to executive hegemony in ...
"Goldwater v. Carter tells the story of the Supreme Court decision to uphold President Jimmy Carter'...
The Framers did not intend the Constitution to be an all-inclusive bill of lading, for we cannot f...
A model of institutional rational choice is presented to describe the actual practice of the separat...
Although lame-duck Presidents frequently push through partisan domestic laws and policies during the...
On December 13, 1979, the Supreme Court vacated and dismissed, on political question and ripeness gr...
The purpose of this Comment is to illustrate a theory of political question jurisprudence which woul...
On December 15, 1979, President Carter announced his intention to recognize and establish diplomatic...
All four articles in this issue of Yale Studies in World Public Order concern an episode of singular...
The act of terminating a treaty may initiate an international embroglio or create international arra...
This Note explores the legal issues surrounding a president\u27s legal authority to unilaterally wit...
The termination of U.S. treaties provides an especially rich example of how governmental practices c...
Foreign Policy by Congress. By Thomas M. Franck and Edward Weisband, New York and Oxford: Oxford Uni...
Foreign Policy by Congress. By Thomas M. Franck and Edward Weisband, New York and Oxford: Oxford Uni...
The President of the United States frequently signs international agreements but postpones ratificat...
The aim of the first section is to examine the judiciary\u27s contribution to executive hegemony in ...
"Goldwater v. Carter tells the story of the Supreme Court decision to uphold President Jimmy Carter'...
The Framers did not intend the Constitution to be an all-inclusive bill of lading, for we cannot f...
A model of institutional rational choice is presented to describe the actual practice of the separat...
Although lame-duck Presidents frequently push through partisan domestic laws and policies during the...