The 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington prompted a global war on terror that led to a significant shift in the balance of executive-legislative power in the United States towards the executive at the expense of the Congress.
In this volume, seasoned scholars examine the extent to which terrorist threats and counter-terrorism policies led uniformly to the growth of executive or Government power at the expense of legislatures and parliaments in other political systems, including those of Australia, Britain, Canada, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, and Russia. The contributors question whether the crises created by 9/11 and subsequent attacks, led inexorably to executive strengthening at the expense of legislatures and parliaments. The research reported finds that democratic forces served to mitigate changes to the balance of legislative and executive power to varying degrees in different political systems.
This book will be of interest to students and researchers of Comparative Government Politics and International Politics.
1. Introduction: The War on Terror and the Growth of Executive Power? A Comparative Analysis John E. Owens and Riccardo Pelizzo 2. Congressional Acquiescence to Presidentialism in the US War on Terror: From Bush to Obama John E. Owens 3. Parliamentary Scrutiny and Oversight of the British War on Terror : Surrendering Power to Parliament or Plus ?a Change? Mark Shephard 4. Putin, Parliament, and Presidential Exploitation of the Terrorist Threat Thomas F. Remington 5. Bipartisanship and Bicameralism in Australias War on Terror: Forcing Limits on the Extension of Executive Power Phil Larkin and John Uhr 6. Canadas War on Terror , Parliamentary Assertiveness, and Minority GovernmentJonathan Malloy 7. Israelis Prolonged War agalS%