Securing the Blessings of Liberty: The Constitutional System"Footnotes": p. 168-173. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 20
Page 25
... requires the adjustment of the desires of the individ- ual to the wants and needs of the whole community to which the ... require ample opportunity for the community to protect its members from injury by selfish pleasure - seekers and ...
... requires the adjustment of the desires of the individ- ual to the wants and needs of the whole community to which the ... require ample opportunity for the community to protect its members from injury by selfish pleasure - seekers and ...
Page 49
... require the unanimous consent of the states to change the fundamental law , as did the Articles of Confederation ... requiring the unanimous consent of the existing members of the Union . Yet this proposal does not leave the theoretical ...
... require the unanimous consent of the states to change the fundamental law , as did the Articles of Confederation ... requiring the unanimous consent of the existing members of the Union . Yet this proposal does not leave the theoretical ...
Page 80
... require . This was the radically different treatment of the executive power in the conduct of the country's foreign relations than in the handling of domestic affairs . The checks upon executive power in the former field of action were ...
... require . This was the radically different treatment of the executive power in the conduct of the country's foreign relations than in the handling of domestic affairs . The checks upon executive power in the former field of action were ...
Contents
PREFACE | 1 |
CHAPTER TWO THE REVOLUTIONARY PRINCIPLES | 19 |
CHAPTER THREE TOWARD A MORE PERFECT UNION | 39 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
adopted American Whigs Articles of Confederation authority branch candidates checks and balances Chief Justice citizens citizenship colonies Committee consti Continental Congress Convention of 1787 Debates decision Declaration of Independence delegates democratic due process effective elections electoral equal ernment established executive federal Federalist Fourteenth Amendment framers Franklin freedom House of Representatives important Jacksonian Democrats Jefferson Jersey Plan John Adams judges judicial King lawmaking leadership legislative legislature liberty living Constitution Madison major parties ment national government national politics Nationalists natural Negroes nominated opinion organization party leaders party system perfect Union person Philadelphia Convention politicians popular popular sovereignty practical President presidential principles process of law proposed protection question reign of law Republican revolutionary right of revolution Section Senate social compact South sovereign sovereignty spirit stitutional Supreme Court system of checks tion tution two-party system United Virginia Plan vote voters Washington Whigs York