« Foreign policy actors » : différence entre les versions
| Ligne 1 : | Ligne 1 : | ||
= The President/Congress dyarchy = | = The President/Congress dyarchy = | ||
== Distribution of original powers == | |||
=== The Powers of Congress === | |||
=== Powers of the President === | |||
== Changes in power relations == | |||
= The bureaucratic maze = | = The bureaucratic maze = | ||
2.1 Departments | 2.1 Departments | ||
Version du 6 février 2018 à 23:37
The President/Congress dyarchy
Distribution of original powers
The Powers of Congress
Powers of the President
Changes in power relations
The bureaucratic maze
2.1 Departments
2.1.1 The Department of State
2.1.2 The Department of Defense
2.1.3 The Treasury Department
2.1.4 The Department of Commerce
2.1.5 The Department of Justice
2.2 The National Security Council[NSC]: A State Department?
2.3 Intelligence services
2.4 Government Agencies
Private actors
3.1 Lobbying in Congress
3.2 Action on the ground
3.3 Institutions of expertise: think tanks
3.3.1 First Generation
3.3.2 Second Generation
3.4 Institutions of Expertise: Private Actors in the Federal Administration
3.5 Institutions of expertise: universities
Annexes
- Casey, Steven. "Selling NSC-68: The Truman Administration, Public Opinion, and the Politics of Mobilization, 1950-51*." Diplomatic History 29.4 (2005): 655-90.