Notice & Comment

Author: Daniel Deacon

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Regulatory Settlement, Stare Decisis, and Loper Bright,” by Lisa Schultz Bressman and Kevin Stack

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Regulatory Settlement, Stare Decisis, and Loper Bright,” by Lisa Schultz Bressman and Kevin M. Stack, which was recently published in the NYU Law Review. Here is the abstract: In Loper Bright v. Raimondo, the Supreme Court adopted and deployed a particular narrative about agency action in support of […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Valuing Administrative Democracy,” by Brian Feinstein and Daniel Walters

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Valuing Administrative Democracy,” by Brian D. Feinstein and Daniel E. Walters. Here is the abstract: Public engagement has long sat at the heart of administrative law’s democratic aspirations. For proponents, opportunities for individuals to participate in agency decision-making help reconcile the administrative state with democratic ideals. Yet a […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Immigration Venue Exceptionalism,” by Stacy Caplow and Maryellen Fullerton

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Immigration Venue Exceptionalism,” by Stacy Caplow and Maryellen Fullerton, which is forthcoming in the Cornell Law Review. Here is the abstract: The notion of “exceptionalism” has characterized immigration law for more than a century. Many constitutional and other traditional norms do not apply in the realm of immigration […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “How Not to Design Expert Bureaucracy: Lessons from Administrative Law,” by Wendy Wagner

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “How Not to Design Expert Bureaucracy: Lessons from Administrative Law,” by Wendy E. Wagner, which is forthcoming in the North Carolina Law Review. Here is the abstract: Can we trust our agency experts to provide reliable scientific knowledge to inform policy? This question has worried academics, policymakers, and […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Officers at Common Law,” by Nathaniel Donahue

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Officers at Common Law,” by Nathaniel Donahue, which is forthcoming in the Yale Law Journal. Here is the abstract: The Framers of the federal Constitution said almost nothing about how subordinate officers would be held accountable. This Article provides one overlooked explanation for this longstanding puzzle. The Constitution […]

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Ad Law Reading Room: “Rubber Stamps,” by Adam Samaha

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Rubber Stamps,” by Adam M. Samaha. Here is the abstract: Rubber-stamping is more often alleged than understood. The basic idea involves someone with formal authority following the views of another actor without serious second thought. Such arrangements are broadly disreputable yet terrifically common in government, and they lack […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Loper Bright’s Disingenuity,” by Coglianese and Froomkin

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Loper Bright’s Disingenuity,” by Cary Coglianese and David Froomkin. Here is the abstract: Loper Bright prompted a tidal wave of reaction throughout the legal community when the Supreme Court announced it was overruling Chevron, the most frequently cited Court decision in administrative law. But Loper Bright cannot mean […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Presidential Brokering in the Regulatory State,” by Nou & “The Chadha Presidency,” by Chafetz

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room brings two entries. The first is “Presidential Brokering in the Regulatory State,” forthcoming in the George Washington Law Review, by Jennifer Nou. The second is “The Chadha Presidency,” by Josh Chafetz. Here is Nou’s abstract: Presidents seeking to make regulatory policy face formidable hurdles, most recently heightened litigation risk, reduced […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “The Gray Area: Finding Implicit Delegation to Agencies after Loper Bright,” by Matthew Stephenson

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “The Gray Area: Finding Implicit Delegation to Agencies after Loper Bright,” by Matthew Stephenson. Here is the abstract: In Loper Bright v. Raimondo, the Supreme Court overruled Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council and repudiated Chevron’s the across-the-board presumption that statutory ambiguities should be treated as implied delegations […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “New Challenges for Federal Regulations: Executive Branch Responses,” by Richard Revesz

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “New Challenges for Federal Regulations: Executive Branch Responses,” by Richard L. Revesz, which is forthcoming in the NYU Law Review. Here is the abstract: Over the last decade, federal regulations have faced increasingly more challenging hurdles. The Supreme Court’s 2024 decision in Loper Bright v. Raimondo, putting an […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Designing Policymaking Mechanisms for Regulatory Dynamism,” by Cohen, Edwards, Jones, and Ohm

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Designing Policymaking Mechanisms for Regulatory Dynamism,” by Julie E. Cohen, Nina-Simone Edwards, Meg Leta Jones, and Paul Ohm. Here is the abstract: The administrative state is struggling to counter the harms of today’s information economy. Existing mechanisms for policymaking fall short both substantively and procedurally. Substantively, regulators face […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “The Lost English Roots of Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking,” by Rephael Stern

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “The Lost English Roots of Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking,” by Rephael G. Stern, which was recently published by the Yale Law Journal and posted to SSRN.  Here is the abstract: Notice-and-comment rulemaking is arguably the most important procedure in the modern administrative state. Influential accounts even frame it as the […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Appropriations Presidentialism,” by Lawrence, Pasachoff, and Price

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room entry is “Appropriations Presidentialism,” by Matthew B. Lawrence, Eloise Pasachoff, and Zachary S. Price, which is forthcoming in the Georgetown Law Journal Online. Here is the abstract: The executive branch is attempting to change how federal spending works by asserting unilateral authority to condition, delay, cancel, or otherwise disrupt federal […]

Notice & Comment

Ad Law Reading Room: “Presidential Administration After Arthrex,” by Rosenblum & Hills and “Science and Politics in Public Health Regulation,” by Bagenstos

Today’s Ad Law Reading Room delivers a twofer (you’re welcome). The first entry is “Presidential Administration After Arthrex,” by Noah A. Rosenblum & Roderick M. Hills, Jr. The second is “Science and Politics in Public Health Regulation,” by Samuel R. Bagenstos. Here is Rosenblum and Hills’ abstract: The federal government employs over 2 million civilian […]