Fr. 129.00

Foreign Affairs Federalism - The Myth of National Exclusivity

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext Foreign Affairs Federalism supplies an important description and analysis of the full range of state and local activity implicating foreign relations, a welcome first book-length treatment of the subject. Foreign Affairs Federalism will help lead constitutional actors, not least the courts, to understand the normalization of the subnational role in global affairs. The issue will become only more important in coming years as political polarization moves beyond the water's edge. Informationen zum Autor Michael J. Glennon is Professor of International Law at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University. Before going into teaching, he was the Legal Counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He is the author of National Security and Double Government (Oxford, 2014); co-author of Foreign Relations and National Security Law, and the author of Constitutional Diplomacy, among other books. His op-ed pieces have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, International Herald-Tribune, Financial Times, and Frankfurt Allgemeine Zeitung.Robert D. Sloane is Professor of Law and the R. Gordon Butler Scholar in International Law at Boston University School of Law. Klappentext Foreign Affairs Federalism studies the constitutional allocation of foreign affairs powers between the federal government and the states. It explains the current law clearly and accessibly, identifying those areas where the law can be confidently ascertained. Where the law cannot be determined, the authors suggest the most plausible or compelling perspectives on existing doctrine. Zusammenfassung Foreign Affairs Federalism studies the constitutional allocation of foreign affairs powers between the federal government and the states. It explains the current law clearly and accessibly, identifying those areas where the law can be confidently ascertained. Where the law cannot be determined, the authors suggest the most plausible or compelling perspectives on existing doctrine. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface Acknowledgments CHAPTER 1 WHY EMPOWER STATES? CHAPTER 2 STATES, CITIES, AND GLOBALIZATION CHAPTER 3 CONSTITUTIONAL METHODOLOGY AND THE ROLE OF THE COURTS CHAPTER 4 DORMANT FOREIGN AFFAIRS PREEMPTION CHAPTER 5 THE DORMANT FOREIGN COMMERCE POWER CHAPTER 6 THE TREATY POWER CHAPTER 7 FEDERAL COMMON LAW AND STATE POWER CHAPTER 8 FEDERAL APPROVAL: THE COMPACT CLAUSE CHAPTER 9 FEDERAL DISAPPROVAL CHAPTER 10 A CASE STUDY: STATES AS CYBER-DEFENDERS CHAPTER 11 CONCLUSION Index ...

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