Working Paper # | Working Paper Title | Author(s) | Link to Paper | Citation |
---|---|---|---|---|
24-15 | Four Futures of Chevron Deference | Daniel E. Walters | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-14 | The Deference Dilemma | Adrian Vermeule | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-13 | Loper Bright in a Larger Interpretive Perspective: Is This Justice Scalia’s Court Anymore? | Victoria F. Nourse | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-12 | Deference to Agency Expertise in Statutory Interpretation | Eli Nachmany | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-11 | Relentless as Entrenchment | Jonathan S. Masur | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-10 | Finding a Place for Expertise After Loper Bright | Emily Hammond | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-09 | Chevron, De Novo: Delegation, Not Deference | John F. Duffy | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-08 | The Meaning of “Silence” | Caroline Cecot | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-07 | Lower Courts After Loper Bright | Lisa Schultz Bressman | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-06 | Chevron and Stare Decisis | Kent Barnett & Christopher J. Walker | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-05 | On the Interpretive Foundations of the Administrative Procedure Act | Aditya Bamzai | Link | 31 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 2 |
24-04 | Presidential Adjudication | Emily S. Bremer | Link | |
24-03 | The Major Questions Doctrine: Right Diagnosis, Wrong Remedy | Thomas W. Merrill | Link | Hoover Institution Press |
24-02 | The Ghosts of Chevron Past and Future | Gary S. Lawson | Link | Boston University Law Review, Vol. 103, No. 6 (2023) |
24-01 | New Jury Trial Expansion as Structural Constitutional Reform | Jennifer L. Mascott | Link | |
23-35 | An Originalist Defense of the Major Questions Doctrine | Michael D. Ramsey | Link | |
23-34 | Biden v. Nebraska: The New State Standing and the (Old) Purposive Major Questions Doctrine | Jed Shugerman | Link | Cato Supreme Court Review, 2022-2023 |
23-33 | Unpacking State Legislative Vetoes | Derek Clinger & Miriam Seifter | Link | |
23-32 | Lover, Mystic, Bureaucrat, Judge: The Communication of Expertise and the Deference Doctrines | Paul J. Ray | Link | |
23-31 | Chevron Then and Now | Michael McConnell | Link | New York University Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 3 (2023) |
23-30 | The Major Answers Doctrine | Lisa Heinzerling | Link | New York University Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 3 (2023) |
23-29 | Our Unruly Administrative State | Philip Hamburger | Link | New York University Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 3 (2023) |
23-28 | What We Talk About When We Talk About the Rule of Law in the Administrative State | Noah A. Rosenblum | Link | New York University Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 3 (2023) |
23-27 | Delegation and the Administrative State: First Steps Towards Fixing Our Rule of Law Paradox | Ronald A. Cass | Link | New York University Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 3 (2023) |
23-26 | What is “The Rule of Law” in Administrative Law? | Adam White | Link | New York University Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 3 (2023) |
23-25 | Saving Agency Adjudication | Aaron L. Nielson & Christopher J. Walker & Melissa F. Wasserman | Link | |
23-24 | Standing Without Injury | Jonathan H. Adler | Link | Forthcoming in Wake Forest Law Review (2024) |
23-23 | Against the Chenery II “Doctrine” | Gary S. Lawson & Joseph Postell | Link | Forthcoming in the Notre Dame Law Review |
23-22 | Fixing Deference: Delegation, Discretion, and Deference under Separated Powers | Ronald A. Cass | Link | New York University Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 17, No. 1 (2023) |
23-21 | Alternative Ways to Define Public Accountability | Paul R. Verkuil | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Per Curiam (June 2023) |
23-20 | Philip Howard’s Not Accountable: Rethinking the Constitutionality of Public Employee Unions | Peter H. Schuck | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Per Curiam (June 2023) |
23-19 | Public Unions and the Constitutional Order | Julia D. Mahoney | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Per Curiam (June 2023) |
23-18 | Not So Fast Philip | E. Donald Elliott | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Per Curiam (June 2023) |
23-17 | Nondelegation in Pennsylvania | David N. Wecht & Lawrence McIntyre | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Spring 2023) |
23-16 | Something There is That Doesn’t Love a Wall | Caleb Stegall | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Spring 2023) |
23-15 | Georgia Judicial Deference to Executive Branch Agency Legal Interpretations | Nels Peterson | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Spring 2023) |
23-14 | Administrative Deference in Colorado | Melissa Hart | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Spring 2023) |
23-13 | The Administrative State and Separation of Powers in Wisconsin | Brian Hagedorn | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Spring 2023) |
23-12 | Administrative Law in the States: An Introduction to the Symposium | Jeffrey S. Sutton | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Spring 2023) |
23-11 | Learning from Laboratories of Liberty | Adam White | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Spring 2023) |
23-10 | How to Combat Anti-Semitism | Tevi Troy | Link | 56 National Affairs, Summer 2023 |
23-09 | Delegation in Context | Michael S. Greve | Link | |
23-08 | The End Externalities Manifesto: Restatement, Loose Ends, and Unfinished Business | J.B. Ruhl | Link | 40 Pace Environmental Law Review No. 3 (2023) |
23-07 | Natural Resource Systems and the Evolution of Environmental Law | Monika Ehrman | Link | 40 Pace Environmental Law Review No. 3 (2023) |
23-06 | A Balanced Prescription for More Effective Environmental Regulations | W. Kip Viscusi | Link | 40 Pace Environmental Law Review No. 3 (2023) |
23-05 | Environmental Law for the 21st Century | E. Donald Elliott & Daniel C. Esty | Link | 40 Pace Environmental Law Review No. 3 (2023) |
23-04 | Bill of Rights Nondelegation | Eli Nachmany | Link | 49 BYU Law Review (forthcoming 2023) |
23-03 | The New Purpose and Intent in Major Questions Cases | Anita S. Krishnakumar | Link | |
23-02 | Negotiated Rulemaking in the U.S. Department of Education: Where Administrative Law Meets Higher Education Policymaking | Rebecca S. Natow | Link | |
23-01 | Regulating Education: Understanding the Office for Civil Rights | R. Shep Melnick | Link | |
22-23 | The Major Questions Doctrine: Unfounded, Unbounded, and Confounded | Ronald M. Levin | Link | |
22-22 | How Should the Court Respond to the Combination of Political Polarity, Legislative Impotence, and Executive Branch Overreach? | Richard J. Pierce, Jr. | Link | Penn State Law Review (2023) |
22-21 | Derailing the Deference Lockstep | Aaron Saiger | Link | Boston University Law Review, Vol 102 (2022) |
22-20 | Administrative Relief and Private Rights of Action Under the Antitrust Laws | Richard A. Epstein | Link | |
22-19 | Antitrust Reform in the Digital Era: A Skeptical Perspective | Robert W. Crandall & Thomas W. Hazlett | Link | University of Chicago Business Law Review (2023) |
22-18 | Antitrust Rulemaking: The FTC’s Delegation Deficit | Thomas W. Merrill | Link | |
22-17 | Chevron and Administrative Antitrust, Redux | Justin (Gus) Hurwitz | Link | |
22-16 | Regulatory Budgeting in the U.S. Federal Government: A First-Hand Account of the Initial Experience and Recommendations for Future Regulatory Budgets | Anthony P. Campau | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Per Curiam No. 25 (2022) |
22-15 | Regulatory Budgeting: Inhibiting or Promoting Better Policies? | Andrea Renda | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Per Curiam No. 25 (2022) |
22-14 | Nondelegation in the States | Benjamin Silver | Link | 75 Vanderbilt Law Review 1211 (2022) |
22-13 | Fiscal Heroism | Zach Price | Link | |
22-12 | Reconstructing Klein | Helen Hershkoff & Fred Smith Jr. | Link | |
22-11 | Equity and the Sovereign | Mila Sohoni | Link | 97 Notre Dame Law Review 2019 (2022) |
22-09 | Interpretation, Remedy, and the Rule of Law: Why Courts Should Have the Courage of their Constitutional Convictions | Ronald A. Cass & Jack Beermann | Link | forthcoming in Administrative Law Review 74, No.4 (2022) |
22-08 | Rethinking the Financial Stability Oversight Council | Paolo Saguato | Link | Virginia Law & Business Review, Vol. 16, No. 3, 505-558 (2022) |
22-06 | Measurement Options for Regulatory Budgeting | Laura Jones & Patrick A. McLaughlin | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Per Curiam No. 25 (2022) |
22-05 | Oversight Riders | Kevin Stack & Michael Vandenbergh | Link | 97 Notre Dame Law Review, 1-506 |
22-04 | Submerged Independent Agencies | Brian D. Feinstein & Jennifer Nou | Link | forthcoming in University of Pennsylvania Law Review |
22-03 | The Unitary Executive Without Inherent Presidential Removal Power | John C. Harrison | Link | |
22-02 | FTC Independence after Seila Law | Daniel A. Crane | Link | Georgetown Journal of Law? Fall 2022? |
22-01 | A Planning Pandemic: The Spread of Mandated Planning and Its Failure in Crisis | Judge Glock | Link | |
21-50 | Lessons for the Law from COVID-19: Alternative Histories to Define the Roles of Politics and Expertise in the Administrative State | E. Donald Elliott | Link | |
21-49 | Can the Federal Trade Commission Use Rulemaking to Change Antitrust Law? | Richard J. Pierce, Jr. | Link | |
21-48 | Countermajoritarian Legislatures | Miriam Seifter | Link | 121 Columbia Law Review 1733 |
21-47 | The Regulatory Budget in Theory and Practice: Lessons from the U.S. States | James Broughel | Link | Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy Per Curiam No. 25 (2022) |
21-46 | Congress’s Anti-Removal Power | Aaron L. Nielson and Christopher J. Walker | Link | forthcoming in Vanderbilt Law Review Vol 76 |
21-45 | Partisan Administration | Kevin M. Stack | Link | |
21-44 | The Purpose of Presidential Administration | Bijal Shah | Link | forthcoming in George Washington Law Review |
21-43 | Faithful Execution in the Federal Government and the Fifty States | Zachary S. Price | Link | 57 Ga. L. Rev. _ |
21-42 | Presidential Polarization | John O. McGinnis & Michael B. Rappaport | Link | Vol. 83 Ohio State Law Journal 5 (2022) |
21-41 | From Presidential Administration to Bureacratic Dictatorship | Kathryn E. Kovacs | Link | 135 Harv. L. Rev. Forum 104 |
21-40 | Divided Agencies | Brian D. Feinstein & Abby K. Wood | Link | forthcoming in Southern California Law Review |
21-39 | The Tragedy of Presidential Administration | Ashraf Ahmed & Lev Menand & Noah Rosenblum | Link | |
21-38 | My Colleague, Steve Williams: Gladly Would He Learn and Gladly Teach | Douglas H. Ginsburg | Link | NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 1 |
21-37 | Stephen F. Williams on Liberalism: The Need to See a Share of Truth on the Opposite Side, and a Share of Error on One’s Own | Nathaniel A. G. Zelinsky | Link | NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 1 |
21-36 | Law Within Limits: Judge Williams and the Constitution | Stephen Sachs | Link | NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 1 |
21-35 | Judge Williams on Administrative Law | Thomas W. Merrill | Link | NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 1 |
21-34 | Judge Stephen Williams’ Environmental Jurisprudence | James L. Huffman | Link | NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 1 |
21-33 | So Close, and Yet So Far Away: Judge Stephen F. Williams on Federalism | Michael S. Greve | Link | NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 1 |
21-32 | Judge Stephen F. Williams and the Underestimated History of the Non-Delegation Doctrine | C. Boyden Gray | Link | NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, Vol. 16, No. 1 |
21-31 | Using Deep and Active Learning Classifiers to Identify Congressional Delegation to Administrative Agencies | Josh Lerner & Gregory P. Spell | Link | |
21-30 | The Myth of the State Nondelegation Doctrines | Joseph Postell & Randolph J. May | Link | |
21-29 | Ending Deference? Why Some State Supreme Courts Have Chosen to Reject Deference and Others Have Not | Daniel Ortner | Link | |
21-28 | Commanding a View: How “Expertise Forcing” Undermines the Unitary Executive and Statesmanship in a Democratic Republic | Daniel Shapiro | Link | |
21-27 | Nondelegation as Constitutional Symbolism | Kristin Hickman | Link | 89 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2021) |
21-26 | Fees, Fines and Penalties: Has Congress Lost Control of the Purse? | Kevin R. Kosar | Link | |
21-25 | Adding Judges: Issues in Federal Courts’ Governance | Ronald A. Cass | Link | |
21-24 | Administrative Law of Scarcity (and Surplus) | Jacob E. Gersen | Link | |
21-23 | The End of Deference: How States Are Leading a (Sometimes Quiet) Revolution Against Administrative Deference Doctrines | Daniel Ortner | Link | |
21-22 | Super Deference and Heigtened Scrutiny (or When Super-Deference Is Not So Super) | Jonathan H. Adler | Link | 73 Fla. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2021) |
21-21 | Decoding Nondelegation After Gundy: What the Experience in State Courts Tells Us About What to Expect When We’re Expecting | Daniel E. Walters | Link | 71 Emory L.J. (forthcoming 2022) |
21-20 | The Federal Reserve and the Crisis of 2020 | Lev Menand | Link | 26. Stan. J.L. Bus. & Fin. 295 (2021) |
21-19 | Sue the Fed: The Case for Privately Enforceable Statutory Constraints on Federal Reserve Emergency Lending | J.W. Verret | Link | |
21-18 | We Need a Vaccine: Proposals for Regulating Innovation in a Pandemic | Kristen Osenga | Link | |
21-17 | Emergency Money: Lessons from the Paycheck Protection Program | Susan C. Morse | Link | Michigan Journal of Law Reform (forthcoming Fall 2021) |
21-16 | The Role of Judgment and Deliberation in Science-Based Policy | M. Anthony Mills | Link | |
21-15 | Retiring “No Look” Judicial Review in Agency Cases Involving Science | E. Donald Elliott | Link | |
21-14 | The Umpire Strikes Back: Expanding Judicial Discretion for Review of Administrative Actions | Ronald A. Cass | Link | |
21-13 | Structured to Fail: Lessons from the Trump Administration’s Faulty Pandemic Planning and Response | Alejandro E. Camacho & Robert L. Glicksman | Link | 10 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. (forthcoming 2021) |
21-12 | The Unintended Health Consequences of Lockdown | Richard A. Williams Kathryn Ghani | Link | |
21-11 | Solving the COVID-19 Vaccine Product Liability Problem | Sam F. Halabi | Link | |
21-10 | Administrative Law Consequentialism: A Response to Vermeule on Emergencies | Daniel Epstein | Link | |
21-09 | Why Supervise Banks? The Foundations of the American Monetary Settlement | Lev Menand | Link | 74 Vand. L. Rev. 951 (2021) |
21-08 | The Lost World of the Administrative Procedure Act: A Literature Review | Christopher J. Walker | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 733 (2021) |
21-07 | The Administrative Procedure Act at 75: Observations and Reflections | Paul R. Verkuil | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 533 (2021) |
21-06 | The Impossibility of Legislative Regulatory Reform and the Futility of Executive Regulatory Reform | Stuart Shapiro | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 717 (2021) |
21-05 | The Origins of the APA: Misremembered and Forgotten Views | Jeremy Rabkin | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 547 (2021) |
21-04 | Agency Adjudication: It Is Time to Hit the Reset Button | Richard J. Pierce, Jr. | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 643 (2021) |
21-03 | Three Wrong Turns in Agency Adjudication | Aaron L. Nielson | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 657 (2021) |
21-02 | Avoiding Authoritarianism in the Administrative Procedure Act | Kathryn E. Kovacs | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 573 (2021) |
21-01 | Rulemaking Then and Now: From Management to Lawmaking | Ronald A. Cass | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 683 (2021) |
20-30 | Cost-Benefit Analysis vs. Regulatory Budgeting: Commentary on Jim Tozzi, “OIRA: Past, Present, and Future” | Christopher Demuth | Link | 11 J. Benefit-Cost Analysis 41 (2020) |
20-29 | Delegation at the Founding | Julian Davis Mortenson & Nicholas Bagley | Link | 121 Colum. L. Rev. 277 (2021) |
20-28 | Meetings, Comments, and the Distributive Politics of Rulemaking | Brian Libgober | Link | 15 Q.J. Pol. Sci. 449 (2020) |
20-27 | Restoring the Promise of Federal Reserve Governance | Peter Conti-Brown | Link | |
20-26 | Rational Non-Delegation | John Yoo | Link | |
20-25 | Nondelegation at the Founding | Ilan Wurman | Link | 130 Yale L.J. 1490 (2021) |
20-24 | The Minor Questions Doctrine | Aaron L. Nielson | Link | 169 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1181 (2021) |
20-23 | The Congressional Bureaucracy | Jesse M. Cross & Abbe R. Gluck | Link | 168 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1541 (2020) |
20-22 | The Revolution That Wasn’t: Conservatives Against Congress, 1981-2018 | Philip A. Wallach | Link | |
20-21 | The Decision of 1946: The Legislative Reorganization Act and the Administrative Procedure Act | Joseph Postell | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 609 (2021) |
20-20 | Extremists and Participation in Congressional Oversight Hearings | Nicholas G. Napolio & Janna King Rezaee | Link | |
20-19 | Transformation of Congressional Lawmaking by the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1970 and Its Effects | Frank T. Manheim | Link | |
20-18 | Congress and the Stability of the Cost-Benefit Analysis Consensus | Caroline Cecot | Link | 73 Admin L. Rev (forthcoming 2021) |
20-17 | A Critical Assessment of the Originalist Case Against Administrative Regulatory Power: New Evidence from the Federal Tax on Private Real Estate in the 1790s | Nicholas R. Parrillo | Link | 130 Yale L.J. 1288 (2021) |
20-16 | Regulating into Uncertainty: Regulation as a Discovery Process | Justin (Gus) Hurwitz Geoffrey A. Manne | Link | |
20-15 | The Case Against Chevron Deference in Immigration Adjudication | Shoba Sivaprasad Wadhia & Christopher J. Walker Christopher J. Walker | Link | 70 Duke L.J. 1197 (2021) |
20-14 | A Realistic Version of Campaign Finance Reform and Two Essential Steps Toward a Return to Effective Governance | Richard J. Pierce, Jr. | Link | |
20-13 | Zoning for Disruption: Local Exposure to Nontraditional Tourist Activity and the Rise of Regulatory Burdens on Digital Platform Short-Term Rentals in Major U.S. Cities | Jordan Carr Peterson | Link | 43 U. Haw. L. Rev. 123 (2020) |
20-12 | Regulation as Partnership | Justin (Gus) Hurwitz | Link | 3 J.L. & Innovation 117 (2020) |
20-11 | Defending the Indispensable: Allegations of Anti-Conservative Bias, Deep Fakes, and Extremist Content Don’t Justify Section 230 Reform | Matthew Feeney | Link | |
20-10 | Reasonableness as Censorship: Algorithmic Content Moderation, The First Amendment, and Section 230 Reform | Enrique Armijo | Link | 73 Fla. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2021) |
20-09 | Why We Need Federal Administrative Courts | Michael S. Greve | Link | 28 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 765 (2021) |
20-07 | Presidential Administration, the Appointment of ALJS and the Future of For Cause Protection | Paul R. Verkuil | Link | 72 Admin. L. Rev. 461 (2020) |
20-06 | Judicial Administration | Bijal Shah | Link | 11 U.C. Irvine L. Rev. 1119 (2021) |
20-05 | Central Clearance as Presidential Management | Andrew Rudalevige | Link | |
20-04 | From Merit to Expertise and Back: The Evolution of the U.S. Civil Service System | Joseph Postell | Link | |
20-03 | Agency Failure and Individual Accountability | Brian Libgober | Link | |
20-02 | Restoring Accountability to the Executive Branch | Philip K. Howard | Link | |
20-01 | Regulating Agencies: Using Regulatory Instruments as a Pathway to Improve Benefit-Cost Analysis | Christopher Carrigan & Mark Febrizio & Stuart Shapiro | Link | |
19-39 | Tales of Woe: How Dysfunctional Regulation Has Decimated Entire Sectors of Biotechnology | Henry I. Miller | Link | Regulatory Transparency Project |
19-38 | Will the “Legal Singularity” Hollow Out Law’s Normative Core? | Robert Weber | Link | 27 Mich. Tech. L. Rev. 97 (2020) |
19-36 | The Sandbox Paradox | Brian Knight & Trace Mitchell | Link | 72 S.C. L. Rev. 445 (2020) |
19-35 | Disruptive Deference for Disruptive Technology | Jennifer Huddleston | Link | |
19-34 | Algorithmic Accountability in the Administrative State | David Freeman Engstrom & Daniel E. Ho | Link | 37 Yale J. Reg. 800 (2020) |
19-33 | Common Carriage and Section 230 | Adam Candeub | Link | 22 Yale J.L. & Tech. 391 (2020) |
19-32 | Remand and Dialogue in Administrative Law | Christopher Walker & James Saywell | Link | 89 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2021) |
19-31 | Litigating Citizenship | Cassandra Burke Robertson & Irina D. Manta | Link | 73 Vand. L. Rev. 757 (2020) |
19-30 | “Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude”: The Puzzling and Persistent (and Constitutional) Immigration Law Doctrine | Craig Lerner | Link | 44 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol. 71 (2021) |
19-29 | Chevron‘s Asylum: Judicial Deference in Refugee Cases | Michael Kagan | Link | 58 Hous. L. Rev. 1119 (2021) |
19-28 | The Forgotten FISA Court: Exploring the Inactivity of the ATRC | Aram A. Gavoor & Timothy Belsan | Link | 81 Ohio St. L.J.139 (2020) |
19-27 | E-Verify: Mining Government Databases to Deter Employment of Unauthorized Aliens | William W. Chip | Link | |
19-26 | Silence and the Second Wall | Ming Hsu Chen Zachary R. New | Link | 28 S. Calif. Interdisc. L.J. 549 (2019) |
19-25 | A Seat at the Table for Citizens: Why the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Applies to Immigration and How Best to Implement this Long Overdue Reform | Julie Axelrod | Link | |
19-24 | Why Two Congressional OIRAs Are Better Than One | William Yeatman | Link | Cato Institute, Policy Analysis No. 888 (2020) |
19-23 | David versus Godzilla: Bigger Stones | Jerry Ellig & Richard A. Williams | Link | 125 Dick. L. Rev. 47 (2020) |
19-22 | Transparency in Agency Cost-Benefit Analysis | Caroline Cecot & Robert W. Hahn | Link | 72 ADMIN. L. REV. 157 (2020) |
19-21 | Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs: Past, Present, and Future | Jim Tozzi | Link | 11 J. Benefit-Cost Analysis 2 (2020) |
19-20 | The Ascendancy of the Cost-Benefit State? | Paul Noe & John D. Graham | Link | 5 Admin. L. Rev. Accord 85 (2020) |
19-19 | Codifying the Cost-Benefit State | Brian F. Mannix & Bridget C.E. Dooling | Link | |
19-18 | OIRA’s Dual Role and the Future of Cost-Benefit Analysis | Stuart Shapiro | Link | 50 Envtl. L. Rep. 10385 (2020) |
19-17 | The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs and the durability of regulatory oversight in the United States | Susan Dudley | Link | Regulation and Governance (2020) |
19-16 | Jimmy Carter and Civil Service Reform | Stuart E. Eizenstat | Link | |
19-14 | Delegation and Time | Jonathan H. Adler & Christopher J. Walker | Link | 105 Iowa L. Rev. 1931 (2020) |
19-13 | Statutory Interpretation, Administrative Deference, and the Law of Stare Decisis | Randy J. Kozel | Link | 97 Tex. L. Rev. 1125 (2019) |
19-12 | Administrative Power and Religious Liberty at the Supreme Court | Mark L. Rienzi | Link | 69 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 355 (2018) |
19-11 | The Sickness Unto Death of the Freedom of Speech | Marc O. DeGirolami | Link | 42 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 751 (2019) |
19-10 | Adjunct Faculty Unionization and Religiously Affiliated Universities | Michael P. Moreland | Link | |
19-09 | Masterpiece Cakeshop and the Future of Religious Freedom | Mark Movsesian | Link | 42 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 711 (2019) |
19-08 | A Perfect Storm: Religion, Sex, and Administrative Law | Helen M. Alvaré | Link | 92 St. John’s L. Rev. 697 (2018) |
19-07 | The Major Questions Doctrine Outside Chevron‘s Domain | Adam R. F. Gustafson | Link | |
19-06 | Regrounding the Private Delegation Doctrine | Paul J. Larkin, Jr. | Link | 73 Fla. L. Rev. 31 (2021) |
19-05 | Nondelegation and Criminal Law | Brenner M. Fissell | Link | 10 U.C. Irvine L. Rev. 855 (2020) |
19-04 | Consent of the Governed: An Underenforced Constitutional Norm | David S. Schoenbrod | Link | 43 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 213 (2020) |
19-03 | The Legislative Politics of Legislative Delegation | Joseph Postell | Link | |
19-02 | Early Customs Laws and Delegation | Jennifer Mascott | Link | 87 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1388 (2019) |
19-01 | Dimensions of Delegation: Constitutional Limits on the Administrative State | Cary Coglianese | Link | 167 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1849 (2019) |
18-12 | How Should the U.S. Public Law System React to President Trump? | Richard J. Pierce, Jr. | Link | 4 Admin. L. Rev. Accord 41 (2019) |
18-11 | Civil Servant Disobedience | Jennifer Nou | Link | 94 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 349 (2019) |
18-10 | The Administrative Law of Regulatory Slop and Strategy | Robert L. Glicksman & Emily Hammond | Link | 68 Duke L.J. 1651 (2019) |
18-09 | Nationwide Injunctions’ Governance Problems: Forum-Shopping, Politicizing Courts, and Eroding Constitutional Structure | Ronald A. Cass | Link | 27 Geo. Mason L. Rev. 29 (2019) |
18-08 | Non-Therapeutic Uses and the FDA | Patricia J. Zettler | Link | 78 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 379 (2021) |
18-07 | Modernizing the Bank Charter | David Zaring | Link | 61 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1397 (2020) |
18-06 | Pipelines & Power-lines: Building the Energy Transport Future | James W. Coleman | Link | 80 Ohio St. L.J. 263 (2019) |
18-05 | Marketable Permits in New Contexts: Have We Learned the Right Lessons from History? | Jason A. Schwartz | Link | |
18-04 | What Cheap Speech Has Done- The Transformation of Libel and Privacy Law | Eugene Volokh | Link | |
18-03 | Due Process, Free Expression, and the Administrative State | Martin H. Redish & Kristin McCall | Link | 94 Notre Dame L. Rev. 297 (2018) |
18-02 | Telemarketing, Technology and the Regulation of Private Speech | Justin (Gus) Hurwitz | Link | 84 Brook. L. Rev. 1 (2018) |
18-01 | Antidiscrimination Laws, the First Amendment, and the Administrative State | David Bernstein | Link | 94 Notre Dame L. Rev. 1381 (2019) |
17-15 | Neoclassical Administrative Law | Jeffrey Pojanowski | Link | 133 Harv. L. Rev. 852 (2020) |
17-14 | Negotiating the Federal Government’s Compliance with Court Orders: An Exploratory Discussion | Nicholas R. Parrillo | Link | 97 N.C. L. Rev. 899 (2019) |
17-13 | How Agencies Choose Whether to Enforce the Law: A Preliminary Investigation | Aaron L. Nielson | Link | 93 Notre Dame L. Rev. 1517 (2018) |
17-12 | Pursuing Pragmatic Finality in Agency Action | Kristin Hickman & Mark Thomson | Link | |
17-11 | His Master’s Voice: Statutory Rulemaking Considerations and Judicial Review of Regulatory Impact Analysis | Reeve Bull & Jerry Ellig Reeve T. Bull | Link | 69 Admin. L. Rev. 725 (2017) |
17-10 | Sticky Regulations | Aaron L. Nielson | Link | 85 U. Chi. L. Rev. 85 (2018) |
17-09 | Take the Fifth…Please! The Original Irrelevance of the Fifth Amendment Due Process of Law Clause | Gary S. Lawson | Link | 2017 BYU L. Rev. 611 (2017) |
17-08 | Administrative Evasion of Procedural Rights | Philip Hamburger | Link | 11 N.Y.U. J.L. & Liberty 915 (2017) |
17-07 | Slip Slidin’ Away | William Funk | Link | 122 Penn. St. L. Rev. 141 (2017) |
17-06 | Due Process and Delegation | Ronald A. Cass | Link | |
17-05 | Exceptional, After All and After Oil States: Judicial Review and the Patent System | Michael S. Greve | Link | 26 B.U. J. Sci. & Tech. L. 101 (2020) |
17-04 | The New World of Agency Adjudication | Christopher J. Walker & Melissa F. Wasserman | Link | 107 Calif. L. Rev. 141 (2019) |
17-03 | Appointments and Illegal Adjudication: The AIA Through a Constitutional Lens | Gary S. Lawson | Link | 26 Geo. Mason L. Rev 26 (2018) |
17-02 | The Exceptionalism Norm in Administrative Adjudication | Emily S. Bremer | Link | 2019 Wis. L. Rev. 1351 |
17-01 | Disguised Patent Policymaking | Saurabh Vishnubhakat | Link | 76 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 1667 (2019) |
16-17 | Too Big for Administrative Law? FSOC Designations and the Fog of “Systemic Risk” | Adam J. White | Link | |
16-16 | Dual Non-Banking System for Fintech | J.W. Verret | Link | |
16-15 | The Dealmaking State- Executive Power In The Trump Administration | Stephen Davidoff Solomon David Zaring | Link | 106 Geo. L.J. 1097 (2018) |
16-14 | Regulation: Political, Administrative, and Constitutional Accountability | Geoffrey Parsons Miller | Link | |
16-13 | Taking Systemic Risk Seriously in Financial Regulation | M. Todd Henderson & James C. Spindler | Link | 92 Ind. L.J. 1559 (2017) |
16-12 | Standing After Scalia | Stephen Vladeck | Link | |
16-11 | Safety Valve – The Resurgent “Major Questions” Doctrine | Nathan Richardson | Link | 49 Conn. L. Rev. 355 (2016) |
16-10 | Protecting States in the Brave New World of Energy Federalism | Daniel Lyons | Link | 67 Emory L.J. 921 (2018) |
16-09 | Ghost Rules | Lincoln Davies and Amy Wildermuth | Link | |
16-08 | Environmental Review of Pipelines, Energy Transport, & Global Energy Markets | James W. Coleman | Link | 2018 Utah L. Rev. 119 (2018) |
16-07 | Is the Clean Air Act Unconstitutional? Coercion, Cooperative Federalism, and Conditional Spending after NFIB v. Sebelius | Jonathan Adler and Nathaniel Stewart | Link | 43 Ecology L.Q. 671 (2017) |
16-06 | Legislating in the Shadows | Christopher Walker | Link | 165 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1377 (2017) |
16-05 | In the Wake of Chevron’s Retreat | Catherine Sharkey | Link | 86 Fordham L. Rev. 2359 (2018) |
16-04 | Beyond Seminole Rock | Aaron Nielson | Link | 105 Geo. L.J. 943 (2017) |
16-03 | Agencies as Adversaries | Daniel Farber and Anne Joseph O’Connell | Link | 105 Calif. L. Rev. 1375 (2017) |
16-02 | The Origins of Judicial Deference to Executive Interpretation | Aditya Bamzai | Link | 126 Yale L.J. 908 (2017) |
16-01 | Marbury v. Madison and the Concept of Judicial Deference | Aditya Bamzai | Link | 81 Mo. L. Rev. 1057 (2016) |