Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3177883746> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 78 of
78
with 100 items per page.
- W3177883746 endingPage "1687" @default.
- W3177883746 startingPage "1591" @default.
- W3177883746 abstract "This article addresses leading objections to the theory that the President enjoys a residual foreign affairs by virtue of Article II, Section 1's grant of the Power. Opponents dispute the central proposition that the Article II vesting clause vests any independent executive power, and the secondary proposition that the executive includes foreign affairs power. Yet these objections to the residual theory suffer from conceptual and historical difficulties that greatly undermine their persuasiveness. First, opponents have no competing theory of the Constitution's text, never answering basic questions: Did the Constitution, as originally understood, completely allocate foreign affairs power, and if so, how? Second, opponents of the residual theory rhetorically inflate the powers it would locate in the President. Critics protest that the Framers did not wish to constitute the President as a king. The residual theory does not lead to presidential supremacy but instead ensures a balanced and divided allocation of foreign affairs powers. Third, critics associate the residual theory with some ill-defined claim of historical or logical inevitability. In fact, the residual theory makes no claims about what the Framers had to do. Instead, it tries to make sense of what they actually did - vesting the executive in the President - by examining the historical meaning of the phrase power in the eighteenth century, and by examining how early statesmen, such as Thomas Jefferson, described and justified the President's foreign affairs powers. Finally, to the extent opponents of theory engage these claims, they have little text or history on their side. Despite prodigious efforts, no one is able seriously to dispute that eighteenth century political writers used the phrase power to include foreign affairs power; and that Americans adopted this vocabulary in discussing the Continental Congress, during the drafting and ratifying debates, and in describing President Washington's assertion of key foreign affairs authorities." @default.
- W3177883746 created "2021-07-19" @default.
- W3177883746 creator A5027605022 @default.
- W3177883746 creator A5073314050 @default.
- W3177883746 date "2005-01-01" @default.
- W3177883746 modified "2023-09-24" @default.
- W3177883746 title "Foreign Affairs and the Jeffersonian Executive: A Defense" @default.
- W3177883746 hasPublicationYear "2005" @default.
- W3177883746 type Work @default.
- W3177883746 sameAs 3177883746 @default.
- W3177883746 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W3177883746 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3177883746 hasAuthorship W3177883746A5027605022 @default.
- W3177883746 hasAuthorship W3177883746A5073314050 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C121332964 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C126053111 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C163258240 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C190253527 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C197487636 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C2776154427 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C2776217807 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C3234755 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C39376844 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C62139897 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C62520636 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C84425819 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C93377909 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C121332964 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C126053111 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C144024400 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C163258240 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C17744445 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C190253527 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C197487636 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C199539241 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C2776154427 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C2776217807 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C3234755 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C39376844 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C62139897 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C62520636 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C84425819 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C93377909 @default.
- W3177883746 hasConceptScore W3177883746C94625758 @default.
- W3177883746 hasLocation W31778837461 @default.
- W3177883746 hasOpenAccess W3177883746 @default.
- W3177883746 hasPrimaryLocation W31778837461 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W1497172809 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W1505373593 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W1530978479 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W1534196768 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W1561858949 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W1589746137 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W175185882 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W2268178467 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W2372256243 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W25786689 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W3107520375 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W3121698953 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W3121936288 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W3122051068 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W3122520568 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W3134905332 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W3163982205 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W40080504 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W2126631336 @default.
- W3177883746 hasRelatedWork W3124451864 @default.
- W3177883746 hasVolume "89" @default.
- W3177883746 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3177883746 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3177883746 magId "3177883746" @default.
- W3177883746 workType "article" @default.