Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-8378-9 • Paperback • November 1996 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-1-4616-4529-0 • eBook • November 1996 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
Gary L. Gregg, II is assistant professor of political science at Clarion University of Pennsylvania.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 Political Representation and the Presidency
Chapter 4 Representation and the Presidency in the The Federalist
Chapter 5 Whiggism and Presidentialism in U.S. History
Chapter 6 The Public Presidency
Chapter 7 The Modern Presidency and Representative Government
Chapter 8 Conclusion: Deliverative Democracy in the Presidential Republic
Chapter 9 Bibliography
Chapter 10 Index
Gregg has taken a key concept, representation, to explore in a clear style and vigorous analysis the promise and risks of presidential power. Highly provocative.
— Louis Fisher, Congressional Research Service
. . . a well-conceived and thoroughly researched regime-level approach to the theory and practice of executive representation as it has developed over American political history that is likely to be an important contribution to the literature on American democracy in general and the role of the president in particular.
— Mary E. Stuckey, Georgia State University
The Presidential Republic is an impressive work that integrates empirical findings into a broader theoretical framework. It is also provocative because Gregg outlines the standards and requirements of a new model for evaluating the presidency, onederived from the principles of the deliberate republic that the Framers sought to establish. Its unique approach and thoroughness guarantee it a high place among those dealing with the office and powers of the presidency....
— George W. Carey, Georgetown University
Gregg has written a serious and scholarly analysis of an issue that few presidential scholars have studied.
— Ryan J. Barilleaux, Miami University, Ohio
This interesting . . . book provides a different means of conceptualizing the issue of presidential leadership. Rather than the traditional focus on the powers and responsibilities of the presidency, Gregg provides us with a reasoned discussion and analysis of the president's "representative" place in our governmental system. . . . Gregg has opened up what is sure to be a new area of debate in the presidential literature. . . . it provides is with considerable intellectual fodder for a discussion of the president's role in a representative form of government.
— Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences
The importance of this well-organized and thoroughly researched book . . . lies in its excellent critique of an overweening presidency and a faction-based Congress.
— Joe Bertolini; Perspectives on Political Science
The Presidential Republic is an impressive work that integrates empirical findings into a broader theoretical framework. It is also provocative because Gregg outlines the standards and requirements of a new "model"for evaluating the presidency, one derived from the principles of the deliberate republic that the Framers sought to establish. Its unique approach and thoroughness guarantee it a high place among those dealing with the office and powers of the presidency.
— George W. Carey, Georgetown University
In his clearly written and persuasive book, Gregg elucidates fundamental changes in the American regime. This reviewer hopes for a forthcoming sequel...
— Marshall L. DeRosa, Political Scientist at Florida Atlantic University and author of several books; University Bookman