Posted by Eric Posner:
The government’s response to the financial crisis and 9/11 compared.
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_11_16-2008_11_22.shtml#1226892991


   A paper (coauthored with Adrian Vermeule) is [1]here; some of the
   ideas I contributed to it originated as posts on this blog. The
   abstract follows.

   This essay compares crisis governance and emergency lawmaking after
   9/11 and the financial meltdown of 2008. We argue that the two
   episodes were broadly similar in outline, but importantly different in
   detail, and we attempt to explain both the similarities and
   differences. First, broad political processes and constraints operated
   in both episodes to create a similar pattern of crisis governance, in
   which Congress delegated large new powers to the executive. We argue
   that this pattern is best explained by reference to the account of
   lawmaking in the administrative state offered by Carl Schmitt, as
   opposed to the standard Madisonian view. Second, within the broad
   constraints of crisis politics, the Bush administration asserted its
   authority more aggressively after 9/11 than in the financial crisis.
   Rejecting competing explanations based on legal differences, the
   nature of the threat, or other factors, we attribute the difference to
   the Bush administration's loss of popularity and credibility over the
   period between 2001 and 2008 and to the more salient and divisive
   distributive effects of financial management.

References

   1. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1300432

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