Introduction: Towards Understanding the American Presidency - Michael A. Genovese Conservatives and the Presidency - Ryan J. Barilleaux Moderates on the Presidency - Thomas E. Cronin and Michael A. Genovese Liberals and the Presidency - Robert J. Spitzer Toward a Constitutional Presidency - David Gray Adler The Unitary Executive - Melanie M. Marlowe Libertarians and the Presidency - Gene Healy
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[COB--he'll want to see pdf chps to see that Genovese answered to his suggestions in revising the intro. As well, Genovese rearranged the order of chapters given his feedback. I edited his quote slightly, pulling from 3 different places in his review.] "The biggest strength of this book is its unique approach to understanding the presidency through multiple ideological and theoretical perspectives. The way that the chapters are organized is another strength of the book. I liked that the chapters have consistency in how they are structured. Each perspective was introduced, problems associated with the presidency were identified, potential solutions were proposed, and concluding remarks closed the chapter. The editor makes the case that understanding the presidency through a number of clashing perspectives allows for perhaps a more holistic assessment of the office." -- Michael Berry * Review * "The book fills a need in presidency literature, because it deals explicitly with various ideological and institutional perspectives that presidency scholars use when evaluating the institution." -- Richard Pious * Review * I do believe that Professor Genovese has an interesting idea because many of terms thrown around when describing the presidency are left undefined. The general idea of having each of the scholars contributing answering the same question provides an excellent point of departure for students so they can engage in comparisons and debate over the different perspectives. -- Craig Goodman * Proposal review--Goodman * My general impression is that this is an extremely interesting framing of a manuscript project! I generally agree with the contention that because "few authors reveal their ideological or partisan preferences, readers often have a difficult time understanding what values, goals, and political orientations animate writings about the presidency." The impulse to make these preferences - and their implications for presidential power - explicit in a series of chapters within a single edited volume is a very good one. -- Jess Rhodes * Proposal review--Rhodes * Examining how different ideologies and partisan viewpoints impact our evaluation of presidential power is a provocative idea for a book. -- Terri Bimes * Proposal review--Bimes *