Comparative Administrative Law New Scholarship Corner (December 2025)
In the end-of-semester and holiday rush, I neglected to post the December 2025 Comparative Administrative Law New Scholarship Corner. So here it is! As always, this list was curated (in a timely fashion–the delay is all mine!) by Eduardo Jordão (FGV Law School, Rio de Janeiro), with the assistance of Eduarda Onzi. The Scholarship Corner is a resource provided through the Comparative Administrative Law listserv.
- Aronson, Mark; Weeks, Greg: Controlling the Administrative State: Essays in Honour of Matthew Groves;
- Carnat, Irina: Automation as Delegation of Power: Constitutional Constraints on AI Systems for the Administration of Justice;
- Cheung, Daisy; Wan, Trevor T. W.: Hong Kong’s failed attempt at criminalising commercial surrogacy: Tale of a flawed legislative transplant;
- Cohen, Julie E.; Edwards, Nina-Simone; Jones, Meg Leta; Ohm, Paul: Including Publics in Administrative Governance;
- Conticelli, Martina; Zumbini, Angela Ferrari; Infantino, Marta: Automating Administrative Decisions in Europe and The United States: the algorithmic state from a comparative perspective;
- Eckstein, Asaf; Granov, Ziv; Schillo, Ariel: Leave the Door Open? Towards a Context-Based Approach to the Revolving Doors;
- Fasone, Cristina; Simoncini, Marta: Spending conditionality in the EU and in the US. Prospects on the EU fiscal integration;
- Grimmelikhuijsen, Stephan; Aleksovska, Marija; van Erp, Judith; Gilad, Sharon; Maman, Libby; Bach, Tobias; Kappler, Moritz; Van Dooren, Wouter; Schomaker, Rahel M; Salomonsen, Heidi Houlberg: Does enforcement style influence citizen trust in regulatory agencies? An experiment in six countries;
- Henry, Makai: Loper Bright v Raimondo: Federalism, Popular Sovereignty, and the Political Question Doctrine;
- King, Alyssa S.: Ethics for traveling judges;
- Lewis, John: The Trump Administration’s Latest Strategy to Rush Deregulation;
- Mahler, Tobias: Risk Narrative: Deconstructing the AIA’s Risk-Based Approach as a Regulatory Heuristic;
- Muñoz, Asier Garrido; Morgan-Foster, Jason; Peat, Daniel; Thévenot-Werner, Anne-Marie: The Law and practice of International Administrative Tribunals;
- Muñoz, Jonelle Peter: The Presumption of Accountability: A New Legal Doctrine in Public Governance;
- Murphy, Richard W.: Ultra Vires Review Of Federal Agency Action Made Simple(R);
- Murray, Philip; Warchuk, Paul: Outster of Judicial Review Clauses and the Common Law;
- Ng, Yee-Fui: Combatting the Code: Regulating Automated Government Decision-Making in Comparative Context;
- Noah, Lars: Transactional Governance and the Weaponization of Executive Orders;
- Pacces, Alessio M.; Zaring, David T.: The Divergence of Mandatory Climate Disclosure in the U.S. and the EU;
- Parrillo, Nicholas R.: Administrative Law as a Choice of Business Strategy: Comparing the Industries Who Have Routinely Sued Their Regulators with the Industries Who Rarely Have;
- Perry, Adam: Abductive Principles of the British Constitution;
- Reich, Peter L.: Comparative Latin American and United States Water Law;
- Simoncini, Marta: The separation of powers and the administrative branch in the European Union;
- Smith, Bryant Walker; Wansley, Matthew: Regulating Robotaxis;
- Wagner, Wendy E.: How Not To Design Expert Bureaucracy: Lessons From Administrative Law;
- Wan, Trevor T. W.: Globetrotting Advocates: Foreign Barristers in Hong Kong Courts;
- Yadav, Abha: Regulatory Governance: Learnings, Challenges and Way Forward.
For more information about this terrific resource, check out my first post on the subject here. Previous editions are also collected here. The full version of the Comparative Administrative Law Scholarship Corner includes complete publication details and abstracts. To get it delivered to your inbox, along with other information and discussion about what’s going on in administrative law around the globe, sign up for the Comparative Administrative Law listserv!

