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  1. 27 de abr. de 2024 · Recuerdo los cursos que tomé con el profesor Richard Neustadt, en Harvard. Fue el experto que más ayudó a aclarar esta posible confusión para el caso de Estados Unidos. Nos decía: “se supone...

  2. 7 de may. de 2024 · Concepts from significant works in the field, like Richard Neustadts equation of presidential power with the power to persuade, and Stephen Skowronek’s ‘parallel moments of political time’, are present in the intellectual hinterland of the book, but never forced onto the reader.

  3. 27 de abr. de 2024 · Contrariamente a la rígida compartimentación que implica la separación de poderes, Neustadt introduce la noción de “instituciones separadas que comparten poder”. En este modelo, si bien las ramas del gobierno mantienen sus identidades distintas, participan en interacción y negociación continua.

  4. goodpoliticsbadpolitics.substack.com › p › trump-was-incredibly-bad-at-presidentingTrump Was Incredibly Bad At Presidenting

    Hace 18 horas · But if you had to focus on just one thing, it’s that by all accounts he utterly failed at the thing that Richard Neustadt thought was the most important thing for presidents to do in order to succeed: Collecting information. Trump didn’t read. He didn’t pay attention during briefings. He didn’t care about policy.

  5. 3 de may. de 2024 · Fred Greenstein and Richard Neustadt—the originators of widely shared contemporary assumptions about the presidency—thus incorrectly theorized the presidency's place in the American constitutional system.

  6. 26 de abr. de 2024 · Starting in my college years, I'd been a student of American government. I'd taken a course from a man who almost symbolizes the study of the presidency, Richard Neustadt, whose Presidential Power is a text for all of us. And it was my great pleasure, many years later, to invite Professor Neustadt to lunch at the White House Mess.

  7. 6 de may. de 2024 · As for the Constitution, Richard Neustadt was correct when he said Eisenhower was not as skillful at manipulating the process to his liking as FDR had been and as LBJ and Reagan would be—but that was not for want of trying.