Neither Separate Nor Equal: Congress in the 1790sKenneth R. Bowling, Donald R. Kennon, United States Capitol Historical Society Ohio University Press, 2000 - 344 páginas Scholars today take for granted the existence of a "wall of separation" dividing the three branches of the federal government. Neither Separate nor Equal: Congress in the 1790s demonstrates that such lines of separation among the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, however, were neither so clearly delineated nor observed in the first decade of the federal government's history. |
Índice
Kenneth R BowlingThe Federal Government and the Republican Court Move to Philadelphia November 1790 March 1791 | 3 |
Anna Coxe ToogoodPhiladelphia as the Nations Capital 17901800 | 34 |
IIThe Social and Political Lives of Members in Philadelphia | 59 |
a Nationalist in Congress 17891793 | 61 |
Robert Morris of Pennsylvania 17891793 | 91 |
The Congressional Career of William Branch Giles 17901798 | 128 |
The Case of Sarah Thatcher 17871792 | 155 |
Untitled | 181 |
Wythe HoltSeparation of Powers? Relations between the Judiciary and Other Branches of the Federal Government before 1803 | 183 |
Coordinating American Foreign Polucy in the Age of Fighting Sails | 211 |
George Washington and Congress 17891797 | 238 |
Secretary of Treasury Alexander Hamilton and Congress | 269 |
President John Adams and Congress in the QuasiWar Crisis | 294 |
Contributors | 333 |
337 | |
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Neither Separate Nor Equal: Congress in the 1790s Kenneth R. Bowling,Donald R. Kennon,United States Capitol Historical Society Visualização de excertos - 2000 |