Administrative Law SSRN Reading List, June 2025 Edition

This summer has been busy, so I’m just barely getting the June reading list posted before August begins. Here is the June 2025 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.
- The Supreme Court’s Fed Carveout: An Initial Assessment by Lev Menand
- Legalistic Noncompliance by Daniel T. Deacon & Leah M. Litman
- Originalism, the Administrative State, and the Clash of Political Theories by J. Joel Alicea (Heritage Foundation’s Edwin Meese II Originalism Lecture, delivered March 20, 2025)
- Pictures of a Revolution: Administrative Law in a Time of Change by Shalev Gad Roisman & Oren Tamir (123 Michigan Law Review 1105 (2025))
- Regulation is a Verb by Cary Coglianese (45 Capital University Law Review 305 (2025))
- The Six Bureaucracy by Jacob E. Gersen & Jeannie Suk Gersen
- The Lost English Roots of Notice-and-Comment Rulemaking by Rephael Stern (134 Yale Law Journal 1955 (2025))
- The Federal Reserve Exception by Benjamin Dinovelli
- Litigating Loper Bright: Interpretive Challenges and Solutions for the Post-Chevron Era by Eric Bolinder (West Virginia Law Review forthcoming)
- The Morality of Legality by Cass R. Sunstein
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 Drake Marsaly for helping put together this monthly post. I’ll report back in August with the next edition.

