Presidential Delegation of Authority in Wartime by Nathan Grundstein

Presidential Delegation of Authority in Wartime

Nathan Grundstein
110 pages
University of Pittsburgh Press
Dec 1961
Paperback
Politics WSBN
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Administration in time of war has come to revolve around the President, and much of the administrative authority of the President is then delegated to extralegal agents. Grundstein's analysis of the experiences of World War I show that such delegation is inevitable: From the beginning of the war Congress delegated many powers to the Chief Executive, who, of necessity, named others to act for him in the prosecution of the war. Furthermore, Congress granted these administrative powers without formally establishing new administrative agencies with attendant Congressional oversight. Though constitutionally the President's powers are exclusively executive as distinguished from administrative, beginning with WWI, and increasing during WWII, the President has become in effect the administrator-in-chief. Nathan Grundstein traces the evolution of a new body of administrative law delineating the unique patterns of wartime organization and administration that emerged during the twentieth century.
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About this book
Pages 110
Publisher University of Pittsb...
Published 1961
Readers 0