The Judicial Development of Presidential War Powers
By (Author) Martin S. Sheffer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th February 1999
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government
Political structure and processes
War and defence operations
Jurisprudence and general issues
History: specific events and topics
342.73062
Hardback
248
Sheffer deals with some of the oldest continuing constitutional problems confronting the American government: the judicial development of presidential war powers, potential constitutional dictatorship, and a wartime constitution. What enhances these problems is the very cryptic language presented by Article II itself. First, the generalities of Article II are read expansively enough to cover specific presidential actions, while a theory of inherent powers tends to justify the means. This combination of action and theory, Sheffer asserts, presumes that ends and means are determined only by the president. The end result is that presidential action takes on the characteristics of constitutional power. As this casebook demonstrates, in times of grave national emergencyespecially warthe president acts as a constitutional dictator. There is a tacit understanding that nothing will be permitted to block the winning of the war. What is necessary, as determined by the chief executive, is done. The president must insure the national survival. Legal niceties are given little attention. Congress does not interfere with the manner in which the president conducts a war; it is a ready ally in almost everything he does, so long as he continues to be successful. As the cases demonstrate, the courts seek to avoid having to rule on the president's conduct, but, when they do rule, they usually uphold the president.
[T]he book is well worth adopting for courses relating to law and society and U.S. foreign policy....[T]he author is to be commended for this fairly comprehensive portrait of a nation struggling with its most fundamental rights and the meaning of democracy.-The Law and Politics Book Review
"The book is well worth adopting for courses relating to law and society and U.S. foreign policy....The author is to be commended for this fairly comprehensive portrait of a nation struggling with its most fundamental rights and the meaning of democracy."-The Law and Politics Book Review
"[T]he book is well worth adopting for courses relating to law and society and U.S. foreign policy....[T]he author is to be commended for this fairly comprehensive portrait of a nation struggling with its most fundamental rights and the meaning of democracy."-The Law and Politics Book Review
MARTIN S. SHEFFER taught for 29 years at Old Dominion University and Tuskegee University. Professor Sheffer's major areas of teaching and research are the American presidency, constitutional law and theory, and American political thought. He has published extensively in academic journals and law reviews, and he is the author of Presidential Power (1991) and God Versus Caesar (forthcoming).