ABSTRACT

How should the United States be governed during times of crisis? Definitely not as we are in times of tranquility, asserts this classic study. The war on terrorism is a case in point. The horrors of terror attacks on the United States have forced Americans to accept legislative changes that might be unthinkable at other times. The "inescapable truth," Clinton Rossiter wrote in his classic study of modern democracies in crisis, is that "No form of government can survive that excludes dictatorship when the life of the nation is at stake."

part |28 pages

Constitutional Dictatorship

chapter I|12 pages

Constitutional Dictatorship

chapter II|14 pages

The Roman Dictatorship

part One|45 pages

Constitutional Dictatorship in the German Republic

chapter IV|11 pages

Article 48 in the Last Years of the Republic

chapter V|13 pages

Article 48 in Law and Theory

part Two|55 pages

Crisis Government in the French Republic

chapter VIII|13 pages

The Government of France in the First World War

chapter IX|13 pages

Crisis Government in Postwar France

part Three|75 pages

Crisis Government in Great Britain

part Four|108 pages

Crisis Government in the United States