Reviews
Joseph Bessette and Jeffrey Tulis have assembled a cast of leading scholars and fresh voices who show that the promise and perils of executive power rest in the president’s ever changing relationship to the Congress, the Courts, and public opinion. The Constitutional Presidency is must reading for scholars and students who want to understand the executive’s critical, uneasy place in the American political system.
A wonderful collection that will generate new interest in the ways in which American presidents work under our constitutional structure. The scholarship is sound and the approach is fundamental to our continuing understanding of the political landscape.
Once again Bessette and Tulis combine their considerable talents to publish a thoughtful collection of essays that explore the reach of presidential power. They underscore that scholarly efforts to study political behavior must carefully consider constitutional sources and limits.
Book Details
Preface
Chapter 1. On the Constitution, Politics, and the Presidency
Chapter 2. The Powers and Duties of the Preisdent: Recovering the Logic and Meaning of Article II
Chapter 3. President Washington's
Preface
Chapter 1. On the Constitution, Politics, and the Presidency
Chapter 2. The Powers and Duties of the Preisdent: Recovering the Logic and Meaning of Article II
Chapter 3. President Washington's Proclamtation of Neutrality
Chapter 4. Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft: The Constitutional Foundations of the Modern Presidency
Chapter 5. Constitutional Controversy and Presidential Election
Chapter 6. Military Tribunals, Prerogative Power, and the War on Terrorism
Chapter 7. Executive Orders
Chapter 8. Budget Power, Constitutional Conflicts, and the National Interest
Chapter 9. Executive Privilege
Chapter 10. Impeachment in the Constitutional Order