Much of the scholarship on war powers looks back on whether U.S. military interventions were authorized, examining the President\u27s powers under Article II of the Constitution, and congressional enactments. That legal question is important, but it does not capture the interactive nature of the dynamic between Congress and the President. This Article instead focuses on the process of dialogue between Congress and the President prior to the exercise of war powers. We examine in detail how that dialogue operates in two recent episodes: the U.S. response to Syrian President Assad\u27s use of chemical weapons in 2013, and the rise of ISIS since 2014. By examining the specifics of how the political branches interact, we can assess whether the e...
This joint work explores a variety of viewpoints all centered around the War Powers Resolution and i...
While the Constitution of the United States created a system of separation of powers and checks and ...
The Syrian regime used chemical weapons against its own citizens in 2013, and since then the U.S. ha...
Much of the scholarship on war powers looks back on whether U.S. military interventions were authori...
How parliaments and legislatures participate in war-making has raised interest among researchers fro...
In this Essay, Professor Matthew Waxman argues that debates about constitutional war powers neglect ...
In the face of terrorist threats and the emergence of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Pres...
I examine the interactions between a president and members of Congress during foreign policy crises ...
The United States\u27 War on Terror lacks identifiable enemies and obvious front lines. It is fought...
This paper is a lightly-footnoted and modestly expanded version of my presentation at the Georgetown...
This dissertation examines how congressional deliberation over the constitutionality of a use of for...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
More than seventeen years after the attacks of September 11, 2001, the United States continues to ba...
This Response to Professor Ramsey\u27s pro-Congress view of the war powers debate presents a complet...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
This joint work explores a variety of viewpoints all centered around the War Powers Resolution and i...
While the Constitution of the United States created a system of separation of powers and checks and ...
The Syrian regime used chemical weapons against its own citizens in 2013, and since then the U.S. ha...
Much of the scholarship on war powers looks back on whether U.S. military interventions were authori...
How parliaments and legislatures participate in war-making has raised interest among researchers fro...
In this Essay, Professor Matthew Waxman argues that debates about constitutional war powers neglect ...
In the face of terrorist threats and the emergence of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Pres...
I examine the interactions between a president and members of Congress during foreign policy crises ...
The United States\u27 War on Terror lacks identifiable enemies and obvious front lines. It is fought...
This paper is a lightly-footnoted and modestly expanded version of my presentation at the Georgetown...
This dissertation examines how congressional deliberation over the constitutionality of a use of for...
Existing legal scholarship about constitutional war powers focuses overwhelmingly on the President\u...
More than seventeen years after the attacks of September 11, 2001, the United States continues to ba...
This Response to Professor Ramsey\u27s pro-Congress view of the war powers debate presents a complet...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
This joint work explores a variety of viewpoints all centered around the War Powers Resolution and i...
While the Constitution of the United States created a system of separation of powers and checks and ...
The Syrian regime used chemical weapons against its own citizens in 2013, and since then the U.S. ha...