06651nam 2200865 a 450 991078907930332120230120082938.00-8195-7095-80-674-33213-X10.4159/harvard.9780674332133(CKB)3390000000059948(EBL)951009(OCoLC)854968430(SSID)ssj0001121631(PQKBManifestationID)11639189(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001121631(PQKBWorkID)11058828(PQKB)11555718(SSID)ssj0000737391(PQKBManifestationID)11974217(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000737391(PQKBWorkID)10782761(PQKB)11702139(OCoLC)821738451(MdBmJHUP)muse9806(DE-B1597)248212(OCoLC)1013936603(OCoLC)1029822742(OCoLC)1032679410(OCoLC)1037979010(OCoLC)1041986730(OCoLC)1046606863(OCoLC)1047006287(OCoLC)1049620191(OCoLC)1054880439(OCoLC)900847175(DE-B1597)9780674332133(Au-PeEL)EBL951009(CaPaEBR)ebr10579833(Au-PeEL)EBL3046695(CaPaEBR)ebr10980928(OCoLC)935280399(MiAaPQ)EBC951009(EXLCZ)99339000000005994819820208h19821961 uy 0engurnn#---|u||utxtccrThe Federalist[electronic resource] /edited, with introduction and notes, by Jacob E. CookeReprint 2014Middletown, Conn. Wesleyan University Press1982, c19611 online resource (701 p.)The John Harvard LibraryReprint. Originally published: Middletown, Conn. : Wesleyan University Press, 1961.Includes index.0-8195-3016-6 0-674-33212-1 Front matter --CONTENTS --EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION --1 INTRODUCTION --2 THE NATURAL ADVANTAGES OF UNION --3 UNION AS A REQUISITE FOR NATIONAL SAFETY --4 RELATIONS WITH FOREIGN POWERS --5 SEPARATE CONFEDERACIES AND FOREIGN POWERS --6 DISUNION AND DISSENSION AMONG THE STATES --7 CAUSES OF WARS AMONG THE STATES IF DISUNITED --8 CONSEQUENCES OF WARS BETWEEN STATES --9 UNION AS A BARRIER TO FACTION AND INSURRECTION --10 THE SIZE AND VARIETY OF THE UNION AS A CHECK ON FACTION --11 THE VALUE OF UNION TO COMMERCE AND THE ADVANTAGES OF A NAVY --12 UNION AND THE NATIONAL REVENUE --13 UNION AND ECONOMY IN GOVERNMENT --14 REPRESENTATIVE REPUBLICS AND DIRECT DEMOCRACIES --15 DEFECTS OF THE CONFEDERATION --16 INABILITY OF THE CONFEDERATION TO ENFORCE ITS LAWS --17 THE FUTURE BALANCE OF STATE AND NATIONAL POWERS --18 THE GREEK. CONFEDERACIES --19 MEDIEVAL AND MODERN CONFEDERACIES --20 THE NETHERLANDS CONFEDERACY --21 DEFECTS OF THE PRESENT CONFEDERATION --22 THE CONFEDERATION: LACK OF POWERS AND OF PROPER RATIFICATION --23 THE NECESSITY OF AN ENERGETIC AND ACTIVE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT --24 TO PROVIDE FOR THE COMMON DEFENSE --25 THE STATES AND THE COMMON DEFENSE --26 THE POWERS OF CONGRESS AND THE COMMON DEFENSE --27 THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE SUPREME LAW OF THE LAND --28 A NATIONAL ARMY AND INTERNAL SECURITY --29 THE REGULATION OF THE MILITIA --30 A GENERAL POWER OF TAXATION --31 THE NECESSITY OF A NATIONAL POWER OF TAXATION --32 EXCLUSIVE AND CONCURRENT POWERS OF TAXATION --33 THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF NATIONAL TAX LAWS --34 CONCURRENT AUTHORITY IN TAXATION --35 FURTHER REASONS FOR AN INDEFINITE POWER OF TAXATION --36 INTERNAL TAXES: DIRECT AND INDIRECT --37 PROBLEMS CONFRONTING THE FEDERAL CONVENTION --38 INCONSISTENCIES OF OPPONENTS OF RATIFICATION --39 REPUBLICANISM, NATIONALISM, FEDERALISM --40 THE AUTHORITY OF THE CONVENTION --41 POWERS DELEGATED TO THE GENERAL GOVERNMENT: I --42 POWERS DELEGATED TO THE GENERAL GOVERNMENT: II --43 POWERS DELEGATED TO THE GENERAL GOVERNMENT: III --44 RESTRICTIONS ON POWERS OF THE STATES --45 POWERS AND CONTINUING ADVANTAGES OF THE STATES --46 STATE AND FEDERAL POWERS COMPARED --47 THE SEPARATION OF POWERS: I --48 THE SEPARATION OF POWERS: II --49 APPEAL TO THE PEOPLE IN CASES OF DISAGREEMENT --50 PERIODICAL APPEALS TO THE PEOPLE --51 CHECKS AND BALANCES --52 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES --53 ANNUAL AND BIENNIAL ELECTIONS --54 THE APPORTIONMENT OF REPRESENTATIVES AND OF TAXES --55 THE HOUSE AND KNOWLEDGE OF LOCAL CIRCUMSTANCES --56 ADEQUACY OF REPRESENTATION IN THE HOUSE --57 THE POPULAR BASIS OF THE HOUSE --58 THE FUTURE SIZE OF THE HOUSE --59 NATIONAL REGULATION OF CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS --60 SAFETY IN NATIONAL CONTROL OF ELECTIONS --61 UNIFORMITY IN THE NATIONAL CONTROL OF ELECTIONS TO THE HOUSE --62 THE NATURE AND THE STABILIZING INFLUENCE OF THE SENATE --63 THE NECESSITY OF A SENATE --64 THE SENATE AND THE TREATY POWER --65 THE SENATE: APPOINTMENTS AND IMPEACHMENTS --66 THE SENATE: FURTHER CONSIDERATION OF THE IMPEACHMENT POWER --67 THE EXECUTIVE --68 THE METHOD OF ELECTING THE PRESIDENT --69 COMPARISON OF THE PRESIDENT WITH OTHER EXECUTIVES --70 ADVANTAGES OF A SINGLE EXECUTIVE --71 THE PRESIDENTIAL TERM OF OFFICE --72 RE-ELIGIBILITY OF THE PRESIDENT --73 THE PRESIDENTIAL SALARY AND VETO --74 THE MILITARY AND PARDONING POWERS OF THE PRESIDENT --75 THE PRESIDENT AND THE TREATY POWER --76 THE PRESIDENT AND THE APPOINTING POWER --77 THE POWERS OF THE PRESIDENT CONCLUDED --78 THE JUDGES AS GUARDIANS OF THE CONSTITUTION --79 THE POSITION OF THE JUDICIARY --80 JURISDICTION OF THE FEDERAL COURTS --81 DISTRIBUTION OF THE JUDICIAL POWER --82 THE STATE AND THE FEDERAL COURTS --83 TRIAL BY JURY --84 THE LACK OF A BILL OF RIGHTS --85 CONCLUSION --INDEX --BackmatterWritten in 1787 and 1788 by James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay as a series of newspaper articles to refute criticism of the proposed constitution.John Harvard LibraryConstitutional lawUnited StatesConstitutional law342.73/024347.30224Hamilton Alexander1757-1804,141010Cooke Jacob Ernest1924-2011.1473575MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910789079303321The Federalist3686797UNINA