Memo to a New President: The Art and Science of Presidential LeadershipSo you've gotten yourself elected president--now what? Help is here in the form of an imaginary memo from your former professor, who integrates the works of the great thinkers (Aristotle, Plato, Machiavelli, etc.) with contemporary scholarship to address the strengths, limitations, and possibilities of presidential leadership. Michael A. Genovese, a highly esteemed presidential scholar, culls numerous nuggets of wisdom about presidential leadership, including past presidents, condensing detailed and academically grounded insights into an engaging and entertaining read. All essential topics are covered, including: presidential character and personality; political institutions and opportunities; power versus leadership; and sources of and limits to presidential power. In-depth coverage of crisis management and wartime decision-making are unique strengths of the book. Chapters are brief and concise, making Memo to a New President far more interesting than supplements such as case studies or documents. Genovese's presentation allows readers to identify with the various constraints on America's chief executive and gives them an opportunity to apply their knowledge and preconceptions (often misconceptions) to the political realities that presidents routinely face. Students are left to grapple with a central question of the book: Is an effective presidency possible without undermining the essence of a democratic republic? |
Contents
To the New President | 3 |
The Worlds Most Exclusive Club | 13 |
Defining Leadership | 33 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
ability achieve action administration adversaries agenda American Presidency authority Bill Clinton bureaucracy Carter checks and balances chief of staff citizens coalitions Congress Constitution court crisis deal decision demands democracy democratic dency dent Eisenhower election emergency executive face follow forces Ford foreign policy Framers Franklin Franklin D George H. W. Bush George W Gerald Ford goals Gracian impeachment important institution issues James Jimmy Carter Kennedy king lead legislative limited Lyndon Johnson Machiavelli means ment mistakes modern presidency moral nation opportunity party phronesis political politicians polls popularity presidency scholar presidential leadership presidential power prince problems responsibility Richard Neustadt Richard Nixon role Ronald Reagan Roosevelt sense separation of powers serve skill sometimes strategy strong success things tion tional Truman United University Press Vietnam vision Watergate weak White House wrote York