The American Political Science Review, Volume 16Westel Woodbury Willoughby, John Archibald Fairlie, Frederic Austin Ogg American Political Science Association., 1922 - Political science American Political Science Review (APSR) is the longest running publication of the American Political Science Association (APSA). It features research from all fields of political science and contains an extensive book review section of the discipline. |
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Page 20
... administration , using his secondary bodies as depositories of administrative power . Neces- sarily they would have to be instruments of public law . it is this public law status of associations that differentiates the school of ...
... administration , using his secondary bodies as depositories of administrative power . Neces- sarily they would have to be instruments of public law . it is this public law status of associations that differentiates the school of ...
Page 33
... administration . On this point Justice Clarke remarks with force , that it was " not possible for the United States to maintain a reader in every newspaper office of the country to approve in advance each issue before it should be ...
... administration . On this point Justice Clarke remarks with force , that it was " not possible for the United States to maintain a reader in every newspaper office of the country to approve in advance each issue before it should be ...
Page 41
... Administration . Beginning on March 4 , 1921 , the Repub- lican party , for the first time in ten years , was in complete control of the executive and both branches of Congress . Entirely apart from the issues of party politics , its ...
... Administration . Beginning on March 4 , 1921 , the Repub- lican party , for the first time in ten years , was in complete control of the executive and both branches of Congress . Entirely apart from the issues of party politics , its ...
Page 43
... administration determined that the tariff was such a difficult question and economic conditions in Europe and the United States were so unsettled , that it might be better to wait . Postmaster general Hays put the idea out in a speech ...
... administration determined that the tariff was such a difficult question and economic conditions in Europe and the United States were so unsettled , that it might be better to wait . Postmaster general Hays put the idea out in a speech ...
Page 47
... administration proposed , the House accepted the measure with unfeigned reluctance . The President's attitude on the bonus was courageous , but here Congress was only too ready to shift responsibility to the executive and postpone the ...
... administration proposed , the House accepted the measure with unfeigned reluctance . The President's attitude on the bonus was courageous , but here Congress was only too ready to shift responsibility to the executive and postpone the ...
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administration adopted amendment American Anglo-Japanese Alliance appointed Article bills British budget cabinet government candidates cent chapters clause commerce commission committee Company Congress constitutional coöperation council Czechoslovakia democracy direct primary discussion dominions Droit economic election executive federal foreign France German governor important industrial institutions interest international law Japan judicial July June Justice labor Law Rev League of Nations legislative legislature London ment Monroe Doctrine Montesquieu municipal North Dakota officers opinion organization Paris party peace political science present President primary primary election principles problems Professor proportional representation proposed Prtg Quar question relations Russia Senate separation of powers Sept session social statute taxation tion treaty United University volume vote voters York