Notice & Comment

Administrative Law SSRN Reading List, March 2021 Edition

I’ve been doing this monthly SSRN post for years, and we’ve had so many months full of great administrative law scholarship. But this last month may be my favorite so far, just such a rich collection of scholarship in one month.

Here is the March 2021 Edition of the most-downloaded recent papers (those announced in the last 60 days) from SSRN’s U.S. Administrative Law eJournal, which is edited by Bill Funk:

  1. Structural Biases in Structural Constitutional Law by Jonathan Gould & David Pozen (New York University Law Review forthcoming)
  2. Countermajoritarian Legislatures by Miriam Seifter (Columbia Law Review forthcoming)
  3. The Congressional Bureaucracy by Jesse Cross & Abbe R. Gluck (168 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1541 (2020))
  4. Is Quasi-Judicial Immunity Qualified Immunity? by William Baude (Stanford Law Review Online forthcoming)
  5. The Rediscovered Stages of Agency Adjudication by Emily S. Bremer (Washington University Law Review forthcoming)
  6. Unpacking Third-Party Standing by Curtis A. Bradley & Ernest A. Young (Yale Law Journal forthcoming)
  7. Reasoned Explanation and Political Accountability in the Roberts Court by Benjamin Eidelson (Yale Law Journal forthcoming)
  8. ‘Come On, Man!’ On Choice, Welfare, and Hayekian Behavioral Economics by Cass R. Sunstein (Behavioral Public Policy Journal forthcoming)
  9. Liberty and Democracy Through the Administrative State: A Critique of the Roberts Court’s Political Theory by Blake Emerson (Hastings Law Journal forthcoming)
  10. Nondelegation in the States by Benjamin Silver

For more on why SSRN and this eJournal are such terrific resources for administrative law scholars and practitioners, check out my first post on the subject here. You can check out the full rankings, updated daily, here.

Thanks to my terrific research assistant Morgan Huff for helping put together this monthly post. I’ll report back in May with the next edition.