Symposium: War, Terrorism and Torture: Limits on Presidential Power in the 21st Century
This symposium was convened by ACS and the Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington on October 7, 2005.
The following Issue Briefs were published at the symposium:
- David Cole and Martin S. Lederman, The National Security Agency's Domestic Spying Program: Framing the Debate
- Former OLC Attorneys, Guidelines for the President's Legal Advisors
- William Michael Treanor, The War Powers Outside the Courts
- Christopher H. Schroeder, Loaded Dice and Other Problems: A Further Reflection on the Statutory Commander in Chief
- Saikrishna Prakash, Regulating the Commander in Chief: Some Theories
- H. Jefferson Powell, The Executive and the Avoidance Canon
- Cornelia Pillard, Unitariness and Myopia: The Executive Branch, Legal Process, and Torture
- Deborah N. Pearlstein, Finding Effective Constraints on Executive Power: Interrogation, Detention, and Torture
- Louis Fisher, Lost Constitutional Moorings: Recovering the War Power
- Neil Kinkopf: The Statutory Commander in Chief
- Harold Hongju Koh, Can the President Be Torturer In Chief?
- Dawn E. Johnsen, Foreword: Symposium on "War, Terrorism, and Torture: Limits on Presidential Power in the 21st Century"
Follow the link for a detailed description of these Issues Briefs.
