The Presidency and Political Science : Two Hundred Years of Intellectual Debate (Interpreting American Politics)

The Presidency and Political Science : Two Hundred Years of Intellectual Debate (Interpreting American Politics)

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 256 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780801873225
  • DDC分類 320.973

基本説明

Reviews the works of over sixty major thinkers, from Thomas Jefferson to Theodore Lowi.

Full Description


This is the first book to survey the intellectual history of presidential scholarship from the Founding to the late 20th century. Reviewing the work of over sixty thinkers, including Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, Woodrow Wilson, Richard Neustadt, James McGregor Burns, and Theodore Lowi, the authors identify six central questions, the answers to which can help form a theory of presidential power: * Does presidential power derive from the prerogatives of office or from incumbency?* Does presidential influence depend upon force of personality, rhetorical leadership, or partisanship?* Does presidential leadership depend upon historical context or is regime-building manifested through political, institutional, and constitutional developments?* Does presidential leadership vary between domestic and foreign affairs?* Does the president actively or passively engage the legislative process and promote a policy agenda?* Does the organization of the executive branch service presidential leadership?Arguing that three paradigms have dominated the history of presidential scholarship-Hamiltonianism, Jeffersonianism, and Progressivism-the authors conclude that today's understanding of the presidency is characterized by a "new realism and old idealism." This book will appeal to students and scholars as well as to general readers with an interest in the American presidency.

Contents

ContentsMythology: The Burns-Kendall DebateCHAPTER TWO Original Intent and the Presidency: Hamilton versus JeffersonCHAPTER THREE Jeffersonianism Sustained: Nineteenth-Century ThinkersCHAPTER FOUR Indictment of Constitutionalism: The Progressive ReconstructionCHATPER FIVE Critics of Progressivism: The Early ConstitutionalistsCHAPTER SIX Sowing the Seeds of Progressivism: Liberalism and the Rise of Heroic PresidencyCHAPTER SEVEN Anti-Aggrandizement Scholars: Attacking Liberal Government and Liberal PresidentsCHATPTER EIGHT From Imperialism to Impotency: Liberal Malaise with Liberal PresidentsCHAPTER NINE Return to Hamiltonianism: Ronald Reagan and the Movement ConservativesCHATPER TEN The Emerging Scholarly Consensus: A New Realism, an Old IdealismCONCLUSION Three Presidential Paradigms: Hamiltonianism, Jeffersonianism, Progressivism