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El. knyga: Presidential Privilege and the Freedom of Information Act

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Tells the story behind the development of the Freedom of Information Act and explores its legacy today

The Freedom of Information Act, developed at the height of the Cold War, highlighted the power struggles between Congress and the president in that tumultuous era. By drawing on previously unseen primary source material and exhaustive archival research, this book reveals the largely untold and fascinating narrative of the development of the FOIA, and demonstrates how this single policy issue transformed presidential behaviour. The author explores the policy's lasting influence on the politics surrounding contemporary debates on government secrecy, public records and the public's 'right to know', and examines the modern development and use of 'executive privilege'.
Preface: Should the information be free? vii
Acknowledgments xviii
List of Abbreviations
xx
1 Introduction
1(31)
The information is free, if you can get it
1(5)
The continuing legislative development cycle
6(6)
Political change and issue evolution through social learning
12(5)
Measurement and empirical support for the model
17(15)
2 Truman and the shift to a Cold War Paradigm mindset
32(22)
The institutionalization of the Cold War and the Truman Doctrine
32(4)
Executive orders, loyalty oaths, and subversive activities
36(10)
When anti-communist hysteria goes too far: A turning point
46(5)
Conclusion
51(3)
3 Eisenhower's executive privilege and the public interest
54(31)
Executive orders, the Office of Strategic Information, and John Moss
58(24)
Presidential power and congressional reprisal
82(3)
4 Kennedy and the Democratic political considerations of compromise
85(24)
Democratic infighting: Directives, orders, and a clarification on executive privilege
89(16)
Conclusion
105(4)
5 LBJ and the politics of passing FOIA
109(31)
Executive privilege, coalition building, and committee jurisdictions
111(6)
The FOIA endgame: How Congress sought to check the President
117(20)
Conclusion
137(3)
6 Nixon and the resurgence of executive privilege
140(39)
Nixon, Moss, and the renewed politics of executive privilege
143(10)
Revisions, recreations, and resurgence of privilege while amending FOIA
153(6)
Watergate, the Supreme Court, and amending FOIA
159(18)
Conclusion
177(2)
7 Ford and veto bargaining over amending FOIA
179(19)
Veto bargaining and congressional blowback
182(14)
Conclusion
196(2)
8 Conclusion: The future of FOIA and executive privilege
198(7)
FOIA going forward and contemporary questions
202(3)
Bibliography 205(3)
Index 208