Notice & Comment

AdLaw Bridge Series

Notice & Comment

George Washington Law Review’s Annual Review of Administrative Law (AdLaw Bridge Series)

Every year I look forward to the George Washington Law Review‘s Annual Review of Administrative Law, as the editors do a great job of selecting articles for inclusion in the issue. (I’m not just saying that because they published the first article I wrote after joining the law faculty here.) This year’s issue was just published, […]

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Administrative Law Without Courts

This Friday the Florida State University College of Law is hosting a terrific conference entitled Environmental Law Without Courts. The conference builds on the law school’s prior conference on environmental law without Congress. As the conference website explains, “[t]his conference will bring together prominent environmental and administrative law scholars from across the country, and explore […]

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Federal Agencies as Statutory Drafters (AdLaw Bridge Series)

I blogged about this project earlier in the year, but I’m excited to report that I finally have a full draft of the article, Legislating in the Shadows, which is forthcoming in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review.  This article documents a previously under-explored yet widespread practice—how agencies confidentially assist Congress in drafting statutes—and then explores […]

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Deference Doctrines Matter

Over at the Library of Law and Liberty, I had a post yesterday, entitled Do Judicial Deference Doctrines Actually Matter?, on Kent Barnett and my new article Chevron in the Circuit Courts, which is forthcoming in the Michigan Law Review. In that post, I briefly recap the current debate about whether to get rid of, or […]

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Bipartisan Agreement on More Regulatory Policy and Economics in Law School Curriculum? (AdLaw Bridge Series)

Yesterday over at LegalPlanet, Dan Farber had an interesting post highlighting a right-of-center proposal for more rigorous training in law school on regulatory policy and economics: Since the days of Felix Frankfurter, the Administrative Law course has been a staple of American law schools.  It’s a great course, but it’s limited.  The same is true […]

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Kavanaugh, Eskridge, Baude & Sachs on Legal Interpretation (AdLaw Bridge Series)

In the last few years, (at least) two important books on legal interpretation have been published: Justice Scalia and Bryan Garner’s Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts, and then Judge Katzmann’s Judging Statutes. I have blogged a fair amount about Reading Law (posts collected here) and contributed to the Green Bag’s entertaining microsymposium on the […]

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Sharkey on the State Farm Future of Chevron Deference (AdLaw Bridge Series)

Earlier this summer at the terrific Rethinking Judicial Deference Conference sponsored by George Mason’s Center for the Study of the Administrative State, Cathy Sharkey presented a provocative paper entitled In the Wake of Chevron’s Retreat. In this paper, Professor Sharkey notes that last year the Supreme Court engaged in two types of narrowing of Chevron deference […]

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Strauss’s 3rd Edition of Administrative Justice in the United States (AdLaw Bridge Series)

With the school year gearing up, I thought I’d do a few posts in this AdLaw Bridge Series about terrific new resources for law students, professors, and administrative law practitioners. The first is the Third Edition of Administrative Justice in the United States, by Peter Strauss. Professor Strauss has long been one of my favorite […]