Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 37
pro vyhledávání: '"Eugene R. Wittkopf"'
Autor:
McCormick, James M, Eugene R. Wittkopf
Publikováno v:
The SHAFR Guide Online
Externí odkaz:
https://doi.org/10.1163/2468-1733_shafr_SIM290050055
Autor:
McCormick, James M, Eugene R. Wittkopf
Publikováno v:
The SHAFR Guide Online
Externí odkaz:
https://doi.org/10.1163/2468-1733_shafr_SIM290050054
Publikováno v:
The SHAFR Guide Online
Externí odkaz:
https://doi.org/10.1163/2468-1733_shafr_SIM290050056
Publikováno v:
The SHAFR Guide Online
Externí odkaz:
https://doi.org/10.1163/2468-1733_shafr_SIM250030141
Autor:
Eugene R. Wittkopf, James M. McCormick
Publikováno v:
Journal of Conflict Resolution. 42:440-466
Many analysts believe that the end of the cold war will spark greater conflict between Congress and the president on foreign issues, thus further undermining the nation's political mythology that politics stops at the water's edge. The authors test t
Publikováno v:
Polity. 30:133-149
This research extends an earlier study of the bipartisan and political perspectives for evaluating congressional-executive relations on foreign policy to cover the Bush administration and the first Clinton term. As expected, the end of the Cold War a
Autor:
Eugene R. Wittkopf
Publikováno v:
The Washington Quarterly. 19:88-106
Autor:
Eugene R. Wittkopf
Publikováno v:
Journal of Conflict Resolution. 38:376-401
In the post-Vietnam Cold War environment, two dimensions—cooperative internationalism and militant internationalism—came to characterize the foreign policy beliefs of American leaders and the mass public. Although grounded in Cold War concepts an
Autor:
James M. McCormick, Eugene R. Wittkopf
Publikováno v:
American Politics Quarterly. 20:26-53
This research evaluates two different perspectives on congressional-executive relations across four major foreign policy issue areas using congressional voting from 1947 to 1988. Both a bipartisan perspective and a partisan/ideological perspective ar
Autor:
Eugene R. Wittkopf, James M. McCormick
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Politics. 52:1077-1100
This paper examines two perspectives on the nature of congressional-executive relations in the making of American foreign policy: the bipartisan perspective, which says that politics stops at the water's edge, and the political perspective, which see