The Federalist PapersPenguin UK, 30.04.1987 - 528 Seiten Written at a time when furious arguments were raging about the best way to govern America, The Federalist Papers had the immediate pratical aim of persuading New Yorkers to accept the newly drafted Constitution in 1787. In this they were supremely successful, but their influence also transcended contemporary debate to win them a lasting place in discussions of American political theory. Acclaimed by Thomas Jefferson as 'the best commentary on the principles of government which ever was written', The Federalist Papers make a powerful case for power-sharing between State and Federal authorities and for a Constitution that has endured largely unchanged for two hundred years. |
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... JUDGES LXXX A FURTHER VIEW OF THE JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT IN RELATION TO THE EXTENT OF ITS POWERS LXXXI A FURTHER VIEW OF THE JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT IN RELATION TO THE DISTRIBUTION OF ITS AUTHORITY LXXXII A FURTHER VIEW OF THE JUDICIAL ...
... JUDGES LXXX A FURTHER VIEW OF THE JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT IN RELATION TO THE EXTENT OF ITS POWERS LXXXI A FURTHER VIEW OF THE JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT IN RELATION TO THE DISTRIBUTION OF ITS AUTHORITY LXXXII A FURTHER VIEW OF THE JUDICIAL ...
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... judges, who could make all treaties, with the “advice and consent” of the Senate. If reelected he could serve with no limits; required rotation in office would be but one of the casualties of '87. For Edmund Randolph this was too much ...
... judges, who could make all treaties, with the “advice and consent” of the Senate. If reelected he could serve with no limits; required rotation in office would be but one of the casualties of '87. For Edmund Randolph this was too much ...
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... judges sharing legislative power would not be a violation of the doctrine but, on the contrary, a relaxation of it necessary to preserve it. The framers turned to notions of mixed and balanced government, the balance of social forces ...
... judges sharing legislative power would not be a violation of the doctrine but, on the contrary, a relaxation of it necessary to preserve it. The framers turned to notions of mixed and balanced government, the balance of social forces ...
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... judges legislative power. His fear, he told the convention, was that this would subject the legislature to the will of the executive. Elbridge Gerry also opposed the Council of Revision because “it was the combining and mixing together ...
... judges legislative power. His fear, he told the convention, was that this would subject the legislature to the will of the executive. Elbridge Gerry also opposed the Council of Revision because “it was the combining and mixing together ...
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... judges with the executive, in the revisionary check on the legislature, any violation of the maxim which requires the great departments of power to be kept separate and distinct. On the contrary, he thought it an auxiliary precaution in ...
... judges with the executive, in the revisionary check on the legislature, any violation of the maxim which requires the great departments of power to be kept separate and distinct. On the contrary, he thought it an auxiliary precaution in ...
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The Federalist Papers Alexander Hamilton,James Madison,John Jay,Lawrence Goldman Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2008 |
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