Our Partisan Foreign Affairs Constitution

IF 3 3区 社会学 Q1 LAW Minnesota Law Review Pub Date : 2011-01-01 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.1900155
Jide Nzelibe
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Abstract

The received wisdom tends to treat constitutional arrangements, such as the allocation of foreign affairs authority, as efficiency enhancing constraints imposed on political actors that were originally negotiated and are currently being interpreted behind a benign veil of ignorance. In this picture, since the net distributive effects of the foreign affairs powers on specific societal groups are considered to be uncertain and unpredictable, the incentive by such groups to engage in an instrumental or self-serving interpretation of such powers is presumably blunted. This Paper suggests, on the contrary, that partisan groups can often reasonably predict ex ante or determine ex post how an expansive or constrained interpretation of specific foreign affairs powers is likely to affect their material or ideological objectives. The issue of interpretative choice in foreign affairs powers usually involves the outcome of the struggle between right and left leaning groups in which each side attempts to increase the number of veto points (or constitutional constraints) on issues that favor the opposition, and decrease the number of veto points on issues that benefit their favored constituencies. Using this framework, this Paper analyzes how postwar partisan conflict between Republican and Democratic leaning constituencies on issues like human right treaties and war powers has both spawned and restricted the scope of foreign affairs authority in the United States. In the early post WWII era, when the New Deal politics of guns and butter were complementary, progressive Democratic constituencies were supportive of a proactive military agenda and favored greater executive branch flexibility in both war powers and in the ratification of human rights treaties, whereas Republican leaning constituencies (and conservative Democrats) were against. Starting in the late-1960s, as fallout of the Vietnam War, the positions of the Republican and Democrat Parties started to switch gradually on war powers. By the1980s, when President Reagan created a cleavage between the politics of guns and butter, in which the growth of the growth of the national security state was decoupled from that of the welfare state, Republican leaning constituencies cemented their support of greater executive branch flexibility in war powers but not in human rights treaty ratification, whereas progressive Democratic constituencies largely adopted an opposite set of institutional preferences. Finally, this Article concludes by critically examining the normative implications of using increased judicial oversight to counteract the effects of foreign affairs partisanship.
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我们的党派外交宪法
公认的智慧倾向于将宪法安排,如外交事务权力的分配,视为对政治行为者施加的提高效率的限制,这些限制最初是通过谈判达成的,目前正被善意的无知面纱所解释。在这种情况下,由于外交权力对特定社会群体的净分配效应被认为是不确定和不可预测的,这些群体对这种权力进行工具性或自私自利的解释的动机可能会减弱。相反,本文认为,党派团体通常可以合理地事先预测或事后确定对特定外交事务权力的扩大或限制解释如何可能影响其物质或意识形态目标。外交事务权力中的解释性选择问题通常涉及左右倾团体之间斗争的结果,其中每一方都试图在有利于反对派的问题上增加否决权(或宪法限制),并减少对其支持的选民有利的问题上的否决权。利用这一框架,本文分析了战后共和党和民主党倾向选区在人权条约和战争权力等问题上的党派冲突如何催生并限制了美国外交事务权威的范围。在二战后的早期,当“枪炮和黄油”的新政政治相辅相成时,进步的民主党选区支持积极的军事议程,并赞成在战争权力和人权条约的批准方面有更大的行政部门灵活性,而倾向共和党的选区(和保守的民主党人)则反对。从20世纪60年代末开始,随着越南战争的影响,共和党和民主党在战争权力问题上的立场开始逐渐转变。到20世纪80年代,当里根总统在枪炮和黄油政治之间创造了一条鸿沟,即国家安全国家的增长与福利国家的增长脱钩时,倾向共和党的选民巩固了他们对行政部门在战争权力方面更大灵活性的支持,但在人权条约批准方面却没有,而进步的民主党选民则在很大程度上采取了相反的制度偏好。最后,本文通过批判性地审查使用增加的司法监督来抵消外交事务党派关系的影响的规范性含义来结束。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: In January 1917, Professor Henry J. Fletcher launched the Minnesota Law Review with lofty aspirations: “A well-conducted law review . . . ought to do something to develop the spirit of statesmanship as distinguished from a dry professionalism. It ought at the same time contribute a little something to the systematic growth of the whole law.” For the next forty years, in conjunction with the Minnesota State Bar Association, the faculty of the University of Minnesota Law School directed the work of student editors of the Law Review. Despite their initial oversight and vision, however, the faculty gradually handed the editorial mantle over to law students.
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