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The Constitution's Text in Foreign Affairs
By
Michael D. Ramsey
Description
This book describes the constitutional
law of foreign affairs, derived from the historical understanding of
the Constitution\\\'s text. It examines timeless and recurring foreign
affairs controversies--such as the role of the president and
Congress, the power to enter armed conflict, and the power to make
and break treaties--and shows how the words, structure, and context
of the Constitution can resolve pivotal court cases and leading
modern disputes. The book provides a counterpoint to much
conventional discussion of constitutional foreign affairs law, which
tends to assume that the Constitution\\\'s text and history cannot give
much guidance, and which rests many of its arguments upon modern
practice and policy considerations.
Using a close focus on the text and a
wide array of historical sources, Michael Ramsey argues that the
Constitution\\\'s original design gives the president substantial
independent powers in foreign affairs. But, contrary to what many
presidents and presidential advisors contend, these powers are
balanced by the independent powers given to Congress, the Senate, the
states, and the courts. The Constitution, Ramsey concludes, does not
make any branch of government the ultimate decision maker in foreign
affairs, but rather divides authority among multiple independent
power centers.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: A Textual Theory of
Foreign Affairs Law
Part I: Sources of National
Power
1. Do Foreign Affairs Powers Come
from the Constitution? Curtiss--Wright and the Myth of Inherent
Powers
2. Foreign Affairs and the
Articles of Confederation: The Constitution in Context
Part II: Presidential Power in
Foreign Affairs
3. The Steel Seizure Case and the
Executive Power over Foreign Affairs
4. Executive Foreign Affairs
Power and the Washington Administration
5. Steel Seizure Revisited: The
Limits of Executive Power
6. Executive Power and Its
Critics
Part III: Shared Powers of the
Senate
7. The Executive Senate: Treaties
and Appointments
8. Goldwater v. Carter: Do
Treaties Bind the President?
9. The Non-Treaty Power:
Executive Agreements and United States v. Belmont
Part IV: Congress\\\'s Foreign
Affairs Powers
10. Legislative Power in Foreign
Affairs: Why NAFTA Is (Sort of) Unconstitutional
11. The Meanings of Declaring War
12. Beyond Declaring War: War
Powers of Congress and the President
Part V: States and Foreign
Affairs
13. Can States Have Foreign
Policies? Zschernig v. Miller and the Limits of Framers\\\' Intent
14. States versus the President:
The Holocaust Insurance Case
15. Missouri v. Holland and the
Seventeenth Amendment
Part VI: Courts and Foreign
Affairs
16. Judging Foreign Affairs:
Goldwater v. Carter Revisited
17. The Paquete Habana: Is
International Law Part of Our Law?
18. Courts and Presidents in
Foreign Affairs
Conclusion: Text as Law in
Foreign Affairs
Notes
Index
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