Administrative Law SSRN Reading List, May 2015 Edition
Here is the May 2015 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 William Funk. Lots a terrific new scholarship to add to any adlaw geek’s summer reading list. Here’s the top ten:
1. A Snapshot of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act by Mike Koehler (Santa Clara Journal of International Law forthcoming)
2. Managing for Social Change: Improving Labor Department Performance in a Partisan Era bySeth D. Harris (West Virginia Law Review forthcoming)
3. A Federal Information Quality Act Challenge to the White House ‘Patent Troll’ Report byRon D. Katznelson
4. Fiduciary Governance by Paul B. Miller and Andrew S. Gold (William & Mary Law Reviewforthcoming 2015)
5. Pragmatism Rules by Elizabeth G. Porter (Cornell Law Review forthcoming)
6. Deferred Action, Supervised Enforcement Discretion, and the Litigation Over Administrative Action on Immigration by Anil Kalhan (UCLA Law Review Discourse forthcoming)
7. The Constitutional Duty to Supervise by Gillian E. Metzger (Yale Law Journal forthcoming)
8. Too Much Transparency? How Critics of Openness Misunderstand Administrative Development by Alasdair S. Roberts (prepared for the Fourth Global Conference on Transparency Research)
9. Governance and Uncertainty by Justin R. Pidot (Cardozo Law Review forthcoming)
10. Running Government Like a Business… Then and Now by Jon D. Michaels (128 Harvard Law Review 1152) (reviewing Nicholas R. Parrillo, Against the Profit Motive (Yale Univ. Press, 2013))
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 Molly Werhan for helping put together this monthly post. I’ll report back at the start of July with the next edition.