Extra-Legal Power and Legitimacy
Perspectives on Prerogative
Herausgeber: Fatovic, Clement; Kleinerman, Benjamin A
Extra-Legal Power and Legitimacy
Perspectives on Prerogative
Herausgeber: Fatovic, Clement; Kleinerman, Benjamin A
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In Extra-Legal Power and Legitimacy: Perspectives on Prerogative, Clement Fatovic and Benjamin A. Kleinerman examine the costs and benefits associated with how governments have yielded extra-legal powers in times of emergency.
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In Extra-Legal Power and Legitimacy: Perspectives on Prerogative, Clement Fatovic and Benjamin A. Kleinerman examine the costs and benefits associated with how governments have yielded extra-legal powers in times of emergency.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 157mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9780199965533
- ISBN-10: 0199965536
- Artikelnr.: 37649045
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 157mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9780199965533
- ISBN-10: 0199965536
- Artikelnr.: 37649045
Clement Fatovic is Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations at Florida International University. His work focuses on modern and contemporary political and constitutional theory, primarily the development of liberalism constitutionalism in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century political thought up to the American Founding. His writing has appeared in the American Journal of Political Science, Perspectives on Politics, History of Political Thought, and more. He is the author of Outside the Law: Emergency and Executive Power (2009). Benjamin A. Kleinerman is Assistant Professor of Constitutional Democracy in the James Madison College at Michigan State University. His work focuses on constitutional democracy, and he has written on the subject of executive power in the American Constitution. He previously taught at Oberlin College and the Virginia Military Institute, and was Garwood Visiting Fellow in the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University (2011-12). His work has appeared in Perspectives on Politics, American Political Science Review, and Nomos. He is the author of The Discretionary President: The Promise and Peril of Executive Power (2009).
* Chapter One: Introduction: Extra-Legal Measures and the Problem of
Legitimacy (Clement Fatovic and Benjamin Kleinerman)
* Part I: Early Frameworks
* Chapter Two: Prerogative Power in Rome (Nomi Claire Lazar)
* Chapter Three: Violating Divine Law: Emergency Measures in Jewish Law
(Oren Gross)
* Chapter Four: Lockean Prerogative: Productive Tensions (Leonard C.
Feldman)
* Part Two: American Perspectives
* Chapter Five: The Limits of Constitutional Government: Alexander
Hamilton on Extraordinary Power and Executive Discretion (George
Thomas)
* Chapter Six: The Jeffersonian Executive: More Energetic, More
Responsible, and Less Stable (Jeremy D. Bailey)
* Chapter Seven: Lincoln and Executive Power During the Civil War: An
Examination of One Case. Constitutional Power or, In Effect, An
Exercise of Prerogative Power? (Michael Kent Curtis)
* Part Three: Prerogative in Contemporary Liberal Democracy
* Chapter Eight: Filling the Void: Democratic Deliberation and the
Legitimization of Extra-Legal Action (Clement Fatovic)
* Chapter Nine: Emergency Powers and Terrorism-Related Regulation circa
2012: Perspectives on Prerogative Power in the United States (Mark
Tushnet)
* Chapter Ten: The Irrelevance of Prerogative Power, and the Evils of
Secret Legal Interpretation (Jack Goldsmith)
Legitimacy (Clement Fatovic and Benjamin Kleinerman)
* Part I: Early Frameworks
* Chapter Two: Prerogative Power in Rome (Nomi Claire Lazar)
* Chapter Three: Violating Divine Law: Emergency Measures in Jewish Law
(Oren Gross)
* Chapter Four: Lockean Prerogative: Productive Tensions (Leonard C.
Feldman)
* Part Two: American Perspectives
* Chapter Five: The Limits of Constitutional Government: Alexander
Hamilton on Extraordinary Power and Executive Discretion (George
Thomas)
* Chapter Six: The Jeffersonian Executive: More Energetic, More
Responsible, and Less Stable (Jeremy D. Bailey)
* Chapter Seven: Lincoln and Executive Power During the Civil War: An
Examination of One Case. Constitutional Power or, In Effect, An
Exercise of Prerogative Power? (Michael Kent Curtis)
* Part Three: Prerogative in Contemporary Liberal Democracy
* Chapter Eight: Filling the Void: Democratic Deliberation and the
Legitimization of Extra-Legal Action (Clement Fatovic)
* Chapter Nine: Emergency Powers and Terrorism-Related Regulation circa
2012: Perspectives on Prerogative Power in the United States (Mark
Tushnet)
* Chapter Ten: The Irrelevance of Prerogative Power, and the Evils of
Secret Legal Interpretation (Jack Goldsmith)
* Chapter One: Introduction: Extra-Legal Measures and the Problem of
Legitimacy (Clement Fatovic and Benjamin Kleinerman)
* Part I: Early Frameworks
* Chapter Two: Prerogative Power in Rome (Nomi Claire Lazar)
* Chapter Three: Violating Divine Law: Emergency Measures in Jewish Law
(Oren Gross)
* Chapter Four: Lockean Prerogative: Productive Tensions (Leonard C.
Feldman)
* Part Two: American Perspectives
* Chapter Five: The Limits of Constitutional Government: Alexander
Hamilton on Extraordinary Power and Executive Discretion (George
Thomas)
* Chapter Six: The Jeffersonian Executive: More Energetic, More
Responsible, and Less Stable (Jeremy D. Bailey)
* Chapter Seven: Lincoln and Executive Power During the Civil War: An
Examination of One Case. Constitutional Power or, In Effect, An
Exercise of Prerogative Power? (Michael Kent Curtis)
* Part Three: Prerogative in Contemporary Liberal Democracy
* Chapter Eight: Filling the Void: Democratic Deliberation and the
Legitimization of Extra-Legal Action (Clement Fatovic)
* Chapter Nine: Emergency Powers and Terrorism-Related Regulation circa
2012: Perspectives on Prerogative Power in the United States (Mark
Tushnet)
* Chapter Ten: The Irrelevance of Prerogative Power, and the Evils of
Secret Legal Interpretation (Jack Goldsmith)
Legitimacy (Clement Fatovic and Benjamin Kleinerman)
* Part I: Early Frameworks
* Chapter Two: Prerogative Power in Rome (Nomi Claire Lazar)
* Chapter Three: Violating Divine Law: Emergency Measures in Jewish Law
(Oren Gross)
* Chapter Four: Lockean Prerogative: Productive Tensions (Leonard C.
Feldman)
* Part Two: American Perspectives
* Chapter Five: The Limits of Constitutional Government: Alexander
Hamilton on Extraordinary Power and Executive Discretion (George
Thomas)
* Chapter Six: The Jeffersonian Executive: More Energetic, More
Responsible, and Less Stable (Jeremy D. Bailey)
* Chapter Seven: Lincoln and Executive Power During the Civil War: An
Examination of One Case. Constitutional Power or, In Effect, An
Exercise of Prerogative Power? (Michael Kent Curtis)
* Part Three: Prerogative in Contemporary Liberal Democracy
* Chapter Eight: Filling the Void: Democratic Deliberation and the
Legitimization of Extra-Legal Action (Clement Fatovic)
* Chapter Nine: Emergency Powers and Terrorism-Related Regulation circa
2012: Perspectives on Prerogative Power in the United States (Mark
Tushnet)
* Chapter Ten: The Irrelevance of Prerogative Power, and the Evils of
Secret Legal Interpretation (Jack Goldsmith)