Description |
ix, 492 pages ; 25 cm |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Contents |
Do foreign affairs powers come from the constitution? : Curtiss-Wright and the myth of inherent powers -- Foreign affairs and the articles of confederation : the constitution in context -- The steel seizure case and the executive power over foreign affairs -- Executive foreign affairs power and the Washington administration -- Steel seizure revisited : the limits of executive power -- Executive power and its critics -- The executive Senate : treaties and appointments -- Goldwater v. Carter : do treaties bind the president? -- The non-treaty power : executive agreements and United States v. Belmont -- Legislative power in foreign affairs : why NAFTA is (sort of) unconstitutional -- The meanings of declaring war -- Beyond declaring war : war powers of Congress and the President -- Can states have foreign policies? : Zschernig v. Miller and the limits of framers' intent -- States versus the President : the Holocaust insurance case -- Missouri v. Holland and the Seventeenth Amendment -- Judging foreign affairs : Goldwater v. Carter revisited -- The Paquete Habana : is international law part of our law? -- Courts, presidents, and international law. |
Subject |
United States -- Foreign relations -- Law and legislation.
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United States. |
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International relations. |
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Constitutional law -- United States.
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Constitutional law. |
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Separation of powers -- United States.
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Separation of powers. |
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Constitutional history -- United States.
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Constitutional history. |
ISBN |
9780674024908 alkaline paper |
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0674024907 alkaline paper |
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