Notice & Comment

Comparative Administrative Law New Scholarship Corner (May 2026)

If you’re looking for some light beach reading, I’ve got great news: back issues of the Comparative Administrative Law New Scholarship Corner are coming your way! In this post, I’m delighted to wish a happy (belated) first anniversary to the Comparative Administrative Law New Scholarship Corner by posting the May 2026 edition, which includes the 72 (!) works listed below. As always, the Scholarship Corner is curated by Eduardo Jordão (FGV Law School, Rio de Janeiro), with the assistance of Eduarda Onzi and is a resource provided through the Comparative Administrative Law listserv.

  1. Aaron, Daniel G.: Law-Policy Tethering;
  2. Ajani, Ali: Limits of Executive Power: DACA and the Instability of Immigration Relief;
  3. Ali, Shahla: Decentralized Harmonization and Agile Inclusivity in Soft Law-Making;
  4. Baud, Patrick François; Lagasse, Philippe: Executive Power and Crown Prerogative in Canada;
  5. Baude, William: Abuse of Power in the Second Trump Administration;
  6. Bobek, Michal: Primacy of EU Law in the Age of (Dis)Integration;
  7. Bosh, Arly: Administrative Growth and Fiscal Outcomes;
  8. Briffault, Richard: Revolving In;
  9. Budaragina, Galina: Management of Legal Risks in Maritime and Multimodal Transport: Prevention, Documentation of Circumstances, and Law Enforcement Practice;
  10. Caputo, Nicholas: Administrative Law’s Fourth Settlement: AI and the Capability-Accountability Trap;
  11. Casey, Conor: The Attorney General’s ‘Devil’: An Introduction to the work of First Treasury Counsel;
  12. Castellano, Nathaniel: GOVERNMENT CONTRACT NOVATION: Overlooked Candidate For “Revolutionary Overhaul”;
  13. Chauvin, Noah: The Capture of the Congressional Intelligence Committees;
  14. Chen, Kuan-Wei: Institutional Sustainability in AI Governance: Comparing Paths in the EU, Japan, and Taiwan;
  15. Christmas, Billy: Toward State Capacity Liberalism;
  16. Clementi, Davide: Green Labels, Red Flags: Comparative Legal Pathways to Environmental Legitimacy in the European Union and the People’s Republic of China;
  17. Cofone, Ignacio: Institutional Accountability and Legitimate Inference in Algorithmic Adjudication: Beyond Trustworthy AI;
  18. Corbett, Noah; Edgar, Andrew; Svetiev, Yane: Networked Governance, Peer Review and Democratic Accountability: Regulating Money Laundering in Australia;
  19. Costa, Helena: Bridging the Gap of National Policies in the Quest to Implement the Artificial Intelligence Act;
  20. Craig, Paul: EU Administrative Law, 4th Edition;
  21. Craig, Robin Kundis; Ruhl, J. B.: Regarding Agency Actions of Vast Economic and (or) Political Significance: The Major Questions Doctrine as the New Administrative Political Question Doctrine;
  22. Damon-Feng, Haiyun: Agency Fact-Making;
  23. Deacon, Daniel: Drafting Regulatory Preambles (Draft Report to the Administrative Conference of the United States);
  24. Edgar, Andrew: Henry VIII Clauses: Problems, Practices and Scrutiny Principles;
  25. Eichensehr, Kristen; Deeks, Ashley S.: National Security and the New Command Economy;
  26. Elsaman, Radwa: Middle East Legislative Insight: Egyptian Public-Private Partnerships Law;
  27. García-Huidobro, Eugenio: La transnacionalización de la auditoría pública en América Latina (The Transnational Transformation of Public Auditing in Latin America);
  28. Genicot, Nathan: Scoring the European Citizen in the AI era;
  29. Haupt, Claudia E.: Safeguarding Professional Expertise;
  30. Hayes, Rosa; Hefti, Angela: Comparative Judicial Enforcement;
  31. Hemel, Daniel J.; Masur, Jonathan S.: Valuing Future Lives;
  32. Jacobs, Sharon; Milcamps, Pierre-Noe: Energy Emergencies and Energy Federalism;
  33. Jansen, Oswald; Meulen van der, Bernd: Leading cases in food law: EU and the Netherlands;
  34. Katz, Tamar; Lloyd George, Alex; Menand, Lev; Wu, Timothy: General Rulemaking Grants and the Federal Trade Commission;
  35. Kaushik, Navodita: Diminishing Transparency: A Critical Analysis of India’s Right to Information Act and Lessons from Nepal;
  36. Khaitan, Tarunabh: Putting Power Back in the ‘Separation of Powers’;
  37. Koh, Jennifer Lee: Incapacitating the Immigration Courts;
  38. Kudya, Danai: Procurement as the Gateway of Digital State Power Governance Implications for AI and Digital Systems in African Public Administration;
  39. Kukavica, Jaka: Regulation;
  40. Lagrotta, Luiz Carlos Nacif: Beyond Predictability: Epistemic Plurality, Institutional Coordination, and the Transformation of Legal Rationality in Global Governance;
  41. Lara Ruiz, Maria Luisa; Gallardo Cobo, Rosa; Montero Simo, Maria José: FROM DIGITAL AGRICULTURE TO RESPONSIBLE TECHNOLOGY: AGRI-FOOD DATA GOVERNANCE AND DATA SPACES IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE;
  42. Lee, Sangyun: Main Developments in Competition Law and Policy 2025 – Korea;
  43. Lee-Geiller, Seulki; Santoro, Caterina; Ali, Mohsan; Charalabidis, Yannis: Uncovering Motivations Behind Open Government Policy: A Policy Diffusion Approach;
  44. Lewarne, Stephen: Administrative Substitution and the Constitution: Restoring Decision-Making at the Margin;
  45. Loddo, Giuseppe: Public-private partnerships and the transformation of urban planning. Public authority and private interests. A comparison of European and US models;
  46. Loscerbo, Fabio: Complementary Protection in Italian Case Law (2024): Procedural Rights, Administrative Practices, and Judicial Trends;
  47. Ma, Chao; Cheng, Chao-Yo: Embedded Courts under Campaign-Style Enforcement: How Top-Down Reforms Reshape Conditional Justice in China;
  48. Macedo, Thyago: Institutional Complementarities and Frictions Between Public and Private Antitrust Enforcement;
  49. McGinnis, John; Pillari, Phil: Against Deferential Skidmore;
  50. Nevitt, Mark: Can Law Adapt to Meet the Climate Crisis?;
  51. Nielson, Aaron: “Corrupting” Expertise in the Age of Loper Bright;
  52. Nielson, Aaron; Walker, Christopher J.: Article II and the Civil Service;
  53. Nunn, Alex: The Article III Factfinding Power;
  54. Opland, Russell: Te Ture Mana Puna Kōrero (The Right to Know Act: A Framework for World-Leading Transparency Legislation);
  55. Opland, Russell: The Statutory Ethics Officer – The Ethics Dividend: A Model of Earned-Trust Regulation for Replacing Prescriptive Compliance with Incentivised Ethical Governance;
  56. Palu Junior, Ivan Luiz: Quantitative Easing and the Accountability Gap: Central Bank Mandate Limits in the UK, USA, and EU;
  57. Petkun, Jonathan: Non-Monetary Incentives and Bureaucratic Performance: Evidence from U.S. Courts;
  58. Qiao, Shitong: Social Norms 2.0: From Private Governance to Co-evolution;
  59. Ramos Munoz, David: Climate Litigation as Conversation: Courts, Climate and Legitimacy;
  60. Ranjan, Sudeep: Blacklisting Of Contractors: A Necessary Evil Or Abuse Of Power By Public Authorities;
  61. Roisman, Shalev: The Exclusive Powers Presidency;
  62. Saud, Mahesh Singh: Political Question Doctrine: A Comparative Analysis of the US, UK & Nepal;
  63. Sethi, Amal; Jones; Brian Christopher: Non-Majoritarian Institutions at the Domestic Level: The Rise of the Unelected;
  64. Shah, Bijal: Envisioning a Protective Administrative Law Framework;
  65. Shaw, Katherine: Power and Immunity in Youngstown and Trump v. United States;
  66. Trein, Philipp; Marjanovic, Marjan; Papadopoulos, Yannis: Co-Creation and Polycentric Democracy in Multi-Level Governance
  67. Walker-Peddakotla, Arti: Resisting Surveillance Procurement;
  68. Waller, Spencer Weber: After the FTC Noncompete Rule;
  69. Welton, Shelley: Building Public Renewables;
  70. West, E. Garrett: A Functional Theory of State Action;
  71. Wildermuth, Amy J.: The Brave New World of Administrative Law;
  72. Yong, Ben: Bureaucracy and Distrust: The Civil Service in the Constitution.

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!