Congressional Innovation and Intervention in Defense Policy: Legislative Authorization of Weapons Systems*
Raymond H. Dawson
American Political Science Review, 1962, vol. 56, issue 1, 42-57
Abstract:
Students of congressional-executive relations have long recognized the weakness of legislative oversight of the Executive, and in few areas of public policy has this weakness been more pronounced than in national defense. A recent and significant change in this relationship was made when the 86th Congress in 1959 imposed upon a reluctant executive and military establishment a major innovation in the established processes of making defense policy. The innovation was deliberately intended to alter the balance in executive-congressional controls over some strategic decisions, and was in the form of a new requirement for legislative authorization of the principal weapons programs of the military services.
Date: 1962
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