01879 2200241 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001800123084002400141100001900165245006200184260003900246300001500285500001900300504001700319520118600336650006701522990002401589990002401613INLIS00000000000227020221101082935 a0010-0520002270221101 | | eng  a0-314-42317-6 aeng a342.041.200 7 a342.041.200 7 SMI c0 aSmith, Jean E.14aConstitution and American Foreign Policy /cJean E. Smith aNew York :bWest Publishing,c1988 axv, 309 p. aIndeks : Index aBibliography athis book attempts to remedy that deficiency. it grows out of a course have thought at The University of Toronto for the past dozen years, and seeks to provide the student with a handbook of pertinent judicial precedent defining the scope and extent of the foreign relations powers. the interested observer of America's role in world affairs, as well as practicing journalists and foreign policy professsionals, also may find the book useful as a compendium of constitutional authority. the book is organized into broad subject areas: constitutional antecendent and original intent: national supremacy and the monopoly of the federal government over foreign affairs; the act of state doctrine; the power to conclude international agrrements; the doctrine of Pplitical questions by which the supreme court frequently defers to the president and conggres in foreign policy matters; the nature of the war powers; the special role of the president to conduct American foreign relations; the evolution of the NSC; the intrusion of national security powers domestically, including electronic surveillance; the rights of citizenship, expratriation, and the protection of Americans abroad. 4aI. United States-Forerign Relations-Law and Legislation-Cases. a00816/MKRI-P/I-2005 a00816/MKRI-P/I-2005