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02824nam a2200313Ia 4500 |
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20241030105349.0 |
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230425s1976 nyu b 001 0 eng d |
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|a 0801410525
|q (cloth)
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|a 9780801410529
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|a 0801491614
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|a 9780801491610
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|a (OCoLC)1377288605
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|a (OCoLC)on1377288605
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|a KF7220.Z9
|b R6 1976
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|a Rossiter, Clinton,
|d 1917-1970.
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|a The Supreme Court and the Commander in Chief /
|c by Clinton Rossiter.
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|a Expanded ed. /
|b with an introductory note and additional text by Richard P. Longaker.
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|a Ithaca, N.Y. :
|b Cornell University Press,
|c c1976.
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300 |
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|a xxiii, 231 p. ;
|c 22 cm.
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|a Incluye referencias bibliográficas e índice.
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|a I. The Supreme Court and the President's power of martial rule : 1. The element of discretion: Martin v. Mott and Luther v. Borden -- 2. Who can suspend the writ of habeas corpus? Ex parte Merryman -- 3. The great exception: ex parte Milligan -- 4. Martial rule in World War II: the case of the Japanese-Americans -- 5. Martial law in Honolulu and military seizure in Chicago -- II. The Supreme Court and other aspects of the war powers : 6. The president's power to wage defensive war -- 7. The Supreme Court's lack of power to declare peace -- 8. Judicial review of the war powers of Congress -- 9. The president's authority over courts-martial and military commissions -- 10. The president's authority over conquered territory -- 11. Conclusion -- III. The Constitution and the commander in chief after 1950 : 12. Presidential power and commitments abroad: the dispatch of troops; presidential authority and executive agreements -- 13. Presidential power and the domestication of national security: the impoundment of funds; national security surveillance; governmental secrecy and the withholding of information -- 14. The use of troops during domestic disturbances -- 15. Conclusion.
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|a "A concise treatment of presidential power by a brilliant writer is once again made available with the reissue of this book, first published in 1951. The book is brought superbly up to date by one of Rossiter's former students, Richard P. Longaker. New material covers vital events of the past twenty-five years, including the steel seizure and the dispatch of troops to Korea under Truman, civil disturbances and the Gulf of Tonkin episode under Johnson, the Pentagon Papers case, and the confrontation between Nixon and the Supreme Court." --Descripción del editor.
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650 |
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|a War and emergency powers
|z United States.
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|a Poderes de emergencia
|z Estados Unidos.
|2 UDESA
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700 |
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|a Longaker, Richard P.
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