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University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press

Cover Image for Treaty Politics and the Rise of Executive Agreements
6 x 9. 264 pgs. 7 Figures, 12 Tables. (2009)

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978-0-472-11687-4
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Subjects
Political Science--American Politics / Political Science--International Relations / Political Science--Political Theory / Political Science--Public Policy

Treaty Politics and the Rise of Executive Agreements
International Commitments in a System of Shared Powers

Glen S. Krutz and Jeffrey S. Peake



Executive agreements offer both the president and Congress a more efficient way to conduct international affairs




About the Book

In foreign relations, U.S. presidents have exercised a growing independence through the use of executive agreements. The U.S. Constitution specifies that two-thirds of the Senate must ratify a proposed treaty but makes no provision for other forms of international agreements. In 1942 the Supreme Court affirmed the legality of executive agreements, and since World War II, they have outnumbered treaties by more than ten to one. Are presidents trampling the Constitution or seeking to streamline the diplomatic process?

Glen S. Krutz and Jeffrey S. Peake argue that the preference for executive agreements is the result of a symbiotic evolution of the executive and the legislative branches and that in order for the United States to survive in a complex, ever-changing global environment and maintain its world power status, it must fulfill international commitments swiftly and confidently. Members of Congress concur that executive agreements allow each branch to function more effectively. At the same time, the House continues to oversee particular policy areas, and presidents still submit the majority of the most significant international commitments to the Senate as treaties.

Krutz and Peake conclude that executive agreements represent a mutual adaptation of the executive and the legislature in a system of shared power.

Glen S. Krutz is Associate Director of the Carl Albert Center and Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Oklahoma. Visit the author's website at:
http://faculty-staff.ou.edu/K/Glen.S.Krutz-1/

Jeffrey S. Peake is Associate Professor of Political Science at Bowling Green State University. Visit the author's website at: http://personal.bgsu.edu/~jpeake/peake.htm

"Krutz and Peake's examination of the increase use of executive agreements offers a valuable lesson in how the president and Congress have responded and adjusted to the growth in the complexity of foreign relations to meet the demands of an ever-increasingly complex and interconnected international community."
—Victoria Farrar-Myers, University of Texas, Arlington

"From reading Treaty Politics and the Rise of Executive Agreements, I learned a good deal about a topic that I thought I knew well. This book will be an excellent addition to the literature on the presidency. It will be read and cited by scholars working in this field."
—Benjamin Ginsberg, Johns Hopkins University

"Glen Krutz and Jeffrey Peake's Treaty Politics and the Rise of Executive Agreements offers a provocative analysis of a neglected topic. Their theoretical and empirical challenge to the usual explanation for the growth of executive agreements, their careful analysis of the treaty process in the Senate and when that body can be decisive, and their assessment of the House of Representatives' role in the agreement process provide important new scholarship for students of the presidency, Congress, and foreign policy."
—James M. McCormick, Iowa State University


Keywords: treaty, executive agreement, presidential-congressional relations, Senate Foreign Relations Committee, State Department, Institutional Change, international agreements

 

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Discussion Questions | Word doc

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