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Presidential Studies Quarterly

- Publisher:
- Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Publication date:
- 2009-03-24
- ISBN:
- 0360-4918
- Copyright:
- COPYRIGHT TV Trade Media, Inc.<br/>COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Description:
Presidential Studies Quarterly (PSQ) is the only scholarly journal that focuses on the most powerful political figure in the world - the President of the United States. An indispensable resource for understanding the U.S. Presidency, Presidential Studies Quarterly offers articles, features, review essays, and book reviews covering Presidential decision making; the operations of the White House; Presidential relations with Congress, the courts, the bureaucracy, the public, and the press; and the President's involvement in public policy issues in both the domestic and international arenas.
Issue Number
- Vol. 47 Nbr. 1, March - March 2017
- Vol. 46 Nbr. 4, December - December 2016
- Vol. 46 Nbr. 3, September 2016
- Vol. 46 Nbr. 2, June - June 2016
- Vol. 46 Nbr. 1, March - March 2016
- Vol. 45 Nbr. 4, December - December 2015
- Vol. 45 Nbr. 3, September - September 2015
- Vol. 45 Nbr. 2, June - June 2015
- Vol. 45 Nbr. 1, March - March 2015
- Vol. 44 Nbr. 4, December - December 2014
- Vol. 44 Nbr. 3, September - September 2014
- Vol. 44 Nbr. 2, June - June 2014
- Vol. 44 Nbr. 1, March - March - March 2014
- Vol. 43 Nbr. 4, December - December 2013
- Vol. 43 Nbr. 3, September - September 2013
- Vol. 43 Nbr. 2, June - June 2013
- Vol. 43 Nbr. 1, March - March 2013
- Vol. 42 Nbr. 4, December - December 2012
- Vol. 42 Nbr. 3, September - September 2012
- Vol. 42 Nbr. 2, June - June 2012
Latest documents
- Michelle Obama: First Lady, American Rhetor.
- Selling War, Selling Hope: Presidential Rhetoric, the News Media, and U.S. Foreign Policy since 9/11.
- The missing element: examining the loyalty-competence nexus in presidential appointments.
- Welcoming their hatred: class populism in Democratic rhetoric in American presidential campaigns, 1932-2012.
- The historical presidency: a theoretical critique of the unitary executive framework: rethinking the first-mover advantage, collective-action advantage, and informational advantage.
- Democracy's Muse: How Thomas Jefferson Became an FDR Liberal, A Reagan Republican, and a Tea Party Fanatic, All the While Being Dead.
- Madison's Hand: Revising the Constitutional Convention; Humboldt and Jefferson: A Transatlantic Friendship of the Enlightenment.
- The relevance of emotions in presidential public appeals: anger's conditional effect on perceived risk and support for military interventions.
- George Washington's Journey: The President Forges a New Nation.
- To Make Men Free: A History of the Republican Party.
Featured documents
- Opposition to the theory of presidential representation: federalists, whigs, and republicans.
- The president, the court, and policy implementation.
- Does the presidency moderate the president?
- What's so sinister about presidential signing statements?
- Taking Our Country Back: The Crafting of Networked Politics From Howard Dean to Barack Obama.
- The missing element: examining the loyalty-competence nexus in presidential appointments.
- Control, accountability, and constraints: rethinking perceptions of presidential responsibility for the economy.
- The historical presidency: 'Rallying force': the modern presidency, social movements, and the transformation of American politics.
- Welcoming their hatred: class populism in Democratic rhetoric in American presidential campaigns, 1932-2012.
- The 2008 National Security Council transition: providing continuity in a bipartisan environment.