The Politics of Justice: Attorney General and the Making of Government Legal PolicyRoutledge, 18/06/2015 - 320 من الصفحات First Published in 2015. This series on American Political Institutions and Public Policy intends to examine contemporary U.S. political developments and to discern their impact on issues of public policy. Cornell W. Clayton’s The Politics of Justice: The Attorney General and the Making o f Legal Policy is the second publication in the series. It is a fascinating study of politics and governance: how one government affects the other and how both affect public policy. Surveying the historical evolution of the office of the Attorney General, Clayton sees significant recent changes in the role, position, and influence of the person who holds that office. |
المحتوى
1936 | |
1952 | |
The Political Role of the Attorney General | |
The Attorney General and the Separation of Powers | |
The New American Political System and the Judicialization of Politics | |
The Department of Justice and Administrative | |
The Politics of Justice | |
Published Speeches and Articles by Attorneys General 19251988 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
2d sess ABA Journal administration’s administrative law agencies agenda American Political amicus curiae Annual Report A.G. Antitrust appointed argued argument Assistant Attorney Attorney General's office Bork Brownell budget bureaucracy Carter central Charles Fried Civil Rights Commission conflict Cong Congressional Quarterly conservative constitutional controversy criminal decision Democratic Department of Justice desegregation discretion discussion Division Edwin Meese Eisenhower executive branch federal courts filed functions government litigation government’s Griffin Bell Hearings Ibid independent counsel institutional investigation issue John judges judicial selection Judiciary Committee jurisprudence Justice Department Justice Department’s Kennedy Law Review lawyers Legal Counsel legal policy legislative lower courts Meese's National Nixon nomination Office of Legal partisan percent policymaking politicized position presidential control prosecute Reagan administration reforms regulatory Republican Richard Robert role S.Ct separation of powers Solicitor General's Special Prosecutor statutes statutory strategy subcommittees Superfund Supreme Court Thornburgh U.S. Congress United University Press vote Watergate White House William York