The American Commonwealth -Cosimo, Inc., 2007 M11 1 - 740 páginas First published in 1888, The American Commonwealth was an instant classic, a three-volume set discussing the political structure of American society, its legal system, and its people with an analysis that is both broad and in-depth. Volume I covers the Constitution and the American political system. It discusses the structure of American government and the ways in which the living American government as an entity responds to crisis. The possibilities and power struggles inherent in the American system of government are examined and documented with a fair hand. Bryce goes into further detail about state constitutions and the differing legal structures that exist on a more local level. Anyone with an interest in politics or American history will find Bryce's commentary penetratingly insightful. British historian VISCOUNT JAMES BRYCE (1838-1922) attended the University of Glasgow and Trinity College, Oxford. He is best known for his scholarship of the Holy Roman Empire. His popular works include Studies in History and Jurisprudence (1901) and Studies in Contemporary Biography (1903). |
Dentro del libro
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Página 2
... seems to require the author of another to justify himself for adding it to the list . I might plead that America changes so fast that every few years a new crop of books is needed to describe the new face which things have put on , the ...
... seems to require the author of another to justify himself for adding it to the list . I might plead that America changes so fast that every few years a new crop of books is needed to describe the new face which things have put on , the ...
Página 3
... seems needed to make the political life and the national character and tendencies of the Americans intelligible to ... seem natural for me to take as a model is the Democracy in America of Alexis de Tocqueville . It would indeed , apart ...
... seems needed to make the political life and the national character and tendencies of the Americans intelligible to ... seem natural for me to take as a model is the Democracy in America of Alexis de Tocqueville . It would indeed , apart ...
Página 4
... seems to me , with all deference to his high authority , a cause not so potent in the moral and social sphere as he deemed it ; and my object has been less to discuss its merits than to paint the institutions and people of America as ...
... seems to me , with all deference to his high authority , a cause not so potent in the moral and social sphere as he deemed it ; and my object has been less to discuss its merits than to paint the institutions and people of America as ...
Página 15
... seems extraordinary . But it is only the expression on its sen- timental side of the most striking and pervading characteristic of the political system of the country , the existence of a double government , a double allegiance , a ...
... seems extraordinary . But it is only the expression on its sen- timental side of the most striking and pervading characteristic of the political system of the country , the existence of a double government , a double allegiance , a ...
Página 18
... seems the most natural introduction to an account of the present Constitution , and may dispense with the need for subsequent explanations and digressions . CHAPTER III THE ORIGIN OF THE CONSTITUTION WHEN in the 18 PART I THE NATIONAL ...
... seems the most natural introduction to an account of the present Constitution , and may dispense with the need for subsequent explanations and digressions . CHAPTER III THE ORIGIN OF THE CONSTITUTION WHEN in the 18 PART I THE NATIONAL ...
Contenido
1 | |
13 | |
15 | |
19 | |
32 | |
38 | |
53 | |
OBSERVATIONS ON THE PRESIDENCY | 70 |
GROWth and DeveLOPMENT OF THE CONSTITUTION | 359 |
THE AMENDMENT OF THE CONSTITUTION | 364 |
THE INTERPRETATION OF THE CONSTITUTION | 372 |
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CONSTITUTION BY USAGE | 391 |
THE RESULTS OF CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT | 400 |
THE STATE GOVERNMENTS | 409 |
NATURE OF THE AMERICAN STATE | 411 |
STATE CONSTITUTIONS | 427 |
WHY GREAT MEN ARE NOT CHOSEN PRESIDENTS | 78 |
THE CABINET | 86 |
THE SENATE | 97 |
THE SENATE AS AN EXECUTIVE AND JUDICIAL BODY | 106 |
ITS WORKING AND INFLUENCE | 111 |
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES | 124 |
THE HOUSE AT WORK | 142 |
THE COMMITTEES OF CONGRESS | 154 |
CONGRESSIONAL LEGISLATION | 165 |
CONGRESSIONAL FINANCE | 174 |
THE RELATIONS OF THE TWO HOUSES | 183 |
CHAP PAGE XIX GENERAL OBSERVATIONS ON CONGRESS | 189 |
THE RELATIONS OF CONGRESS TO THE PRESIDENT | 208 |
THE LEGISLATURE AND THE EXECUTIVE | 215 |
THE FEDERAL COURTS | 228 |
THE COURTS AND THE CONSTITUTION | 241 |
THE WORKING OF THE COURTS | 261 |
COMPARISON OF THE AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN SYSTEMS | 277 |
GENERAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE FRAME OF NATIONAL GOVERNMENT | 298 |
THE FEDERAL SYSTEM | 312 |
Working RelaTIONS OF THE NATIONAL AND THE STATE GOVERNMENTS | 325 |
CRITICISM OF THE FEDERAL SYSTEM | 342 |
MERITS OF THE FEDERAL SYSTEM | 350 |
THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATE CONSTITUTIONS | 450 |
DIRECT LEGISLATION BY THE PEOPLE | 463 |
STATE LEGISLATURES | 477 |
THE STATE EXECUTIVE | 494 |
THE STATE JUDICIARY | 501 |
STATE FINANCE | 512 |
THE WORKING OF STATE GOVERNMENTS | 528 |
XLV REMEDIES FOR THE FAULTS OF STATE GOVERNMENTS | 549 |
STATE POLITICS | 565 |
THE TERRITORIES | 578 |
LOCAL GOVERNMENT | 589 |
OBSERVATIONS ON RURAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT | 611 |
THE GOVERNMENT OF CITIES | 622 |
THE WORKING OF CITY GOVERNMENTS | 635 |
AN AMERICAN VIEW OF MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT IN THE UNITED STATES | 650 |
ON CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS | 667 |
EXTRACTS FROM THE RULES OF THE SENATE | 673 |
THE FEDERAL SYSTEM OF THE ENGLISH UNIVERSITIES | 682 |
ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION 178188 | 690 |
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES | 697 |
EXTRACTS FROM THE CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF CALI | 711 |
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