A literature review (also known as a literature survey or bibliographic essay) is a common assignment across the disciplines. For more information on how to approach this task, see our handout on Writing Literature Reviews. For over three decades, scholarship on the American presidency has taken place beneath the shadow of Richard Neustadts PresidentialPower[1] , first published in 1960 and periodically updated since that time. Neustadts book can be seen to also exist beneath a larger shadow cast by the developing notion of a modern presidency that dated from the administration of Franklin Roosevelt and that represented a transformation from the previous, more traditional presidency. [2] This modern presidency recognized the informal leadership powers of the president and argued that these powers overshadowed the formal constitutional powers of the traditional presidency, and that they were especially necessary for effective government. Neustadts book also displaced Edward S. Corwins ThePresident:OfficesandPowers as the dominant work in presidential scholarship. Corwin describes his work as primarily a study in American public law, and its central theme as the development and contemporary status of presidential power and of the presidential office under the Constitution which did not ignore the personal
Use the order calculator below and get started! Contact our live support team for any assistance or inquiry.
[order_calculator]