Quick Actions to Improve Recruitment, Hiring, and Accountability in the Federal Workforce
/ | Leave a CommentJeffrey Salmon, Visiting Assistant Professor of Government, Claremont McKenna College Executive Summary: Over the last many years, prestigious commissions have concluded that the Federal civil service needs fundamental reform. However, their proposals […]
FACTS, SCIENCE, AND EXPERTISE IN THE ADMINISTRATIVE STATE
/ | Leave a CommentSuper Deference and Heightened Scrutiny (Or When Super-Deference is Not So Super)Jonathan H. Adler, Johan Verheij Memorial Professor of Law, and Director, Coleman P. Burke Center for Environmental Law, Case Western […]
ADMINISTRATION IN CRISIS: PANDEMICS, FINANCIAL CRISES, AND OTHER EMERGENCIES
/ | Leave a CommentStructured to Fail: Lessons from the Trump Administration’s Faulty Pandemic Planning and ResponseAlejandro E. Camacho, Chancellor’s Professor of Law and Faculty Director, Center for Land, Environment, and Natural Resources, University of […]
JUDICIAL REVIEW AFTER KISOR AND THE CENSUS CASE
/ | Leave a CommentThe Umpire Strikes Back: Expanding Judicial Discretion for Review of Administration ActionsRonald A. Cass, Dean Emeritus, Boston University School of Law; Distinguished Senior Fellow, C. Boyden Gray Center for the Study […]
PUBLIC HEALTH: REGULATION, INNOVATION, AND PREPARATION
/ | Leave a CommentSolving the COVID-19 Vaccine Product Liability ProblemSam F. Halabi, Visiting Professor, University of Iowa College of Law; Manley O. Hudson Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Columbia; Scholar, O’Neill Institute for National […]
THE FEDERAL RESERVE, FINANCIAL REGULATION AND THE ADMINISTRATIVE STATE
/ | Leave a CommentThe Problem of Federal Reserve Governance: Law, Politics, and HistoryPeter Conti-Brown, Assistant Professor, the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania; Visiting Professor, Columbia Law School (Fall 2020); Nonresident Fellow in […]
DELEGATIONS AND NONDELEGATION AFTER GUNDY
/ | Leave a CommentNondelegation as Constitutional SymbolismKristin E. Hickman, McKnight Presidential Professor of Law, University of Minnesota Delegation at the FoundingJulian Davis Mortenson, Professor of Law, University of Michigan, and Nicholas Bagley, Professor of Law, University of […]
FIRST BRANCH, SECOND THOUGHTS – WHAT IS CONGRESS’S PROPER ROLE IN THE ADMINISTRATIVE STATE?
/ | Leave a CommentCongress and the Stability of the Cost-Benefit Analysis ConsensusCaroline Cecot, Assistant Professor of Law, Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University The Congressional BureaucracyJesse M. Cross, Assistant Professor, University of South Carolina […]
Autumn 2020
/ | Leave a CommentCost-Benefit Analysis vs. Regulatory Budgeting: Commentary on Jim Tozzi, “OIRA: Past, Present, and Future”Christopher DeMuth, Distinguished Fellow, The Hudson Institute
SHOULD INTERNET PLATFORM COMPANIES BE REGULATED⏤AND IF SO, HOW?
/ | Leave a CommentReasonableness as Censorship: Algorithmic Content Moderation, The First Amendment, and Section 230 ReformEnrique Armijo, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Professor, Elon University School of Law, and Affiliated Fellow, Yale Law […]
Takeaways from the Conference on the Future of White House Regulatory Oversight and Cost-Benefit Analysis
/ | Leave a CommentRichard J. Pierce, Jr., Lyle T. Alverson Professor of Law, the George Washington University Law School Executive Summary: On September 13, 2019, the C. Boyden Gray Center for the Study of the […]
Civil Service: Pulling In or Pushing Away
/ | Leave a CommentSally Katzen, Professor of Practice and Distinguished Scholar in Residence at NYU School of Law, and Senior Distinguished Fellow at the C. Boyden Gray Center for the Study of the Administrative […]
August 10, 2020
/ | Leave a CommentA Realistic Version of Campaign Finance Reform and Two Essential Steps Toward a Return to Effective GovernanceRichard J. Pierce, Jr., Lyle T. Alverson Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law […]
March 25, 2020
/ | Leave a CommentWhy We Need Federal Administrative CourtsMichael S. Greve, Professor of Law, Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University
BUREAUCRACY AND PRESIDENTIAL ADMINISTRATION: EXPERTISE AND ACCOUNTABILITY IN CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT
/ | Leave a CommentRegulating Agencies: Using Regulatory Instruments as a Pathway to Improve Benefit-Cost AnalysisChristopher Carrigan, Associate Professor and MPA Program Director, The Trachtenberg School, and Co-Director, GW Regulatory Studies Center, George Washington University; Mark […]