Description

Book Synopsis

This new text analyzes the development of the presidency as the dominant political institution in the United States and raises questions about its future relevance. 

In this history of the U.S. executive branch from the framing of the Constitution to the Biden administration, author Wilbur C. Rich illuminates the transformation of the presidential role by a variety of extra-constitutional, non-legal forces, technology, and social changes.The book highlights how some presidents nevertheless have managed to maintain relevancy and dominance by adapting to these changes or by introducing changes of their own. 

For undergraduate students and researchers of presidential history and American political development, this expansive historical overview of the executive branch in America makes a strong case that the significance of the American presidency has declined dramaticallyand perhaps irrevocablyin the modern presidency.



Table of Contents

1 The Post-Colonial Gentry and Ruminations of Agency 2 Elites’ Fashioning a Front Man 3 The Transmutation of Presidents into Economic Czars 4 Presidents Through Ages of Foreign Policy 5 Desideratum of Staffing—Send in the “Lilliputians” 6 News Reporting and Presidency 7 Presidential Stability and Rapid Change Conclusion

The Upcoming Insignificance of the American

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Thu 2 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback by Wilbur C. Rich

    15 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of The Upcoming Insignificance of the American by Wilbur C. Rich

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 1/15/2023 12:12:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781032568942, 978-1032568942
      ISBN10: 1032568941

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This new text analyzes the development of the presidency as the dominant political institution in the United States and raises questions about its future relevance. 

      In this history of the U.S. executive branch from the framing of the Constitution to the Biden administration, author Wilbur C. Rich illuminates the transformation of the presidential role by a variety of extra-constitutional, non-legal forces, technology, and social changes.The book highlights how some presidents nevertheless have managed to maintain relevancy and dominance by adapting to these changes or by introducing changes of their own. 

      For undergraduate students and researchers of presidential history and American political development, this expansive historical overview of the executive branch in America makes a strong case that the significance of the American presidency has declined dramaticallyand perhaps irrevocablyin the modern presidency.



      Table of Contents

      1 The Post-Colonial Gentry and Ruminations of Agency 2 Elites’ Fashioning a Front Man 3 The Transmutation of Presidents into Economic Czars 4 Presidents Through Ages of Foreign Policy 5 Desideratum of Staffing—Send in the “Lilliputians” 6 News Reporting and Presidency 7 Presidential Stability and Rapid Change Conclusion

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