Questia Home Search the library Browse the library Read Workspace
Generated from local file. Cache size:400 (not visible in beta/prod)

Presidential Power



President - in modern republics, the chief executive and, therefore, the highest officer in a government. Many nations of the world, including the United States, France, Germany, India, and the majority of Latin American nations, have a president as the official head of state. However, the actual power of the presidency varies considerably from country to country. In Germany the presidential   Read More...

Read full-text books and articles on:  

Presidential Power

  1. 1 .


    Presidential Power: Forging the Presidency for the Twenty-First Century
    by Robert Y. Shapiro, Martha Joynt Kumar, Lawrence R. Jacobs. 507 pgs.



  2. 2 .



  3. 3 .



  4. 4 .



  5. 5 .



  6. 6 .



  7. 7 .



  8. 8 .



  9. 9 .



  10. 10 .



  11. 11 .



  12. 12 .



  13. 13 .



  14. 14 .



  15. 15 .



  16. 16 .



Search the entire Questia Library for more on: Presidential Power


View all books and articles on presidential power

Customize your search: Search within the topic presidential power


Search in:
Books Journals Magazines
Newspapers Encyclopedia Research Topics
  • Type your specific word or phrase in the box above after the word and, then click Search.
  • Put exact phrases in double quotation marks. Do not put single words in quotation marks.

Search the Library

Customize your search: Search within the topic Presidential Power


Search in:
Books Journals Magazines
Newspapers Encyclopedia Research Topics
  • Type your specific word or phrase in the box above after the word and, then click Search.
  • Put exact phrases in double quotation marks. Do not put single words in quotation marks.
Read more than 5,000 classic books FREE!
Back to top